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The Assessment Loop Form (ALF) is a valuable tool for tracking student learning and faculty assessment practices. Discover its purposes, components, analysis, unexpected impact findings, and reflections. Explore where we go next with ALF and how faculty can improve.
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Assessment Loop Form Assessment Loop Forms: What Did We Learn? Where Do We Go?
Assessment Loop Form (ALF) Background • Accreditation recommendation • Institution-program-classroom assessment • ALF = classroom component • ALF documents what faculty are already doing
ALF Purposes • Help faculty track student learning • Help faculty see what others are doing • Data archived for accreditation • Data archived for program review • Other?
ALF: What Did We Learn? • Faculty are assessing all the time • Faculty care about learners and want to help them • Assessment can be messy
ALF Components • Outcome • Assessment • Change/Intervention • Impact of Change/Intervention • Reflections • New Questions
ALF: Outcome • What is a learning outcome?
ALF: Outcome Analysis • ~35% of ALFs included one learner-centered outcome • ~15% of ALFs included more than one outcome • Are we overachievers? Multi-taskers? Do we lack assessment experience? Is the ALF difficult to understand? • ~20% of ALFs were written with teacher-centered rather than learner-centered language
ALF: Assessment • What are we measuring?
ALF: Assessment Analysis • Over 90% of ALF assessments related to: • Student performance (exams, quizzes, class projects, etc.) • Student feedback (questions, comments, student evaluations, blank stares, etc.) • Student behavior (engagement/participation, work completion, etc.)
ALF: Change • Based on assessment of learning, faculty introduce a change/intervention to improve student learning
ALF: Change Analysis • Predictably, changes are specific to classes • Common themes, however, exist
ALF: Impact • Faculty were to reassess students to determine impact of change on learning • Like initial assessment, majority of ALFs included language relating to student performance, feedback, and behavior
ALF: Unexpected Impact Findings • ~15% of ALFs included word “might” to reference student behavior, performance, feedback • ~15% of ALFs included language like “seemed” and “understood” without evidence to back up findings
ALF: Reflections • Because of private nature of ALF component, comments were more diverse • ~28% indicated contentment with results/student success • ~11% mentioned an unexpected occurrence • ~8% iterated the need to help students succeed • ~8% reported assessment being worth the effort
ALF: Common Themes Among Reflections • Students actively participating in the classroom learning experience is important • Making connections between classroom and “real life” experiences is important
ALF: New Questions • Faculty interested in pursuing assessment in their classrooms • ~34% want to continue to re-develop, re-time, and/or expand ALF activity • ~20% intend to repeat, or will consider repeating, ALF activities in future classes • ~11% intend to repeat, or will consider repeating, ALF activity in other parts of class • ~7.5% will continue to help improve student success
ALF: What the Fig? • ALF = opportunity for individual to pursue answers to learning questions • Faculty Inquiry Groups (FIGs) = opportunity for groups to pursue answers to learning questions
Five-Minute Water Cooler Activity • Small group • Create one learner-centered outcome for chosen discipline • Identify evidence needed to assess outcome
ALF: Where Do We Go? • New Form • Online • Instructions shortened • Drop-down menus, checkboxes • Text boxes • ELOs added • Samples can be attached • ALF can be saved!
ALF: Where Do We Go? • There will be ALF training in the TLC • Contact Trish Root for individualized help • X4593 • troot@sccd.ctc.edu
Thank You… • Assessment Committee • Jack Bautsch • Sam Bayne • Betsy Campbell • Lori Casile • Noris Daniel • Davene Eyres • Faculty Leadership Community • Boyd Gittins • Jane Lister-Reis • Mary Ellen O’Keeffe • Brian Palmer