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Benchmarking Academic Programs: Methods and Examples

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Benchmarking Academic Programs: Methods and Examples

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    1. Benchmarking Academic Programs: Methods and Examples

    2. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 2 June 2, 2004

    3. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 3 June 2, 2004 The University of Central Florida established in 1963 in Orlando Florida (first classes in 1968), Metropolitan Research University grown from 1,948 to 41,700 students in 35 years 34,400 undergraduates and 7,300 graduates 12 instructional sites in regional campus system doctoral intensive 84 Bachelors, 64 Masters, 3 Specialist, and 23 PhD programs second largest undergraduate enrollment in state projected largest undergraduate enrollment in 2005 approximately 1,100+ faculty and 3,100 staff eight colleges Arts and Sciences, Business Administration, Education, Engineering and Computer Science, Health and Public Affairs, Honors, Optics and Photonics, and Hospitality Management

    4. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 4 June 2, 2004 UCF Strategic Initiative increase prominence in graduate studies UCF will increase its emphasis on high-quality graduate education, providing professional education to meet the needs of the metropolitan area while achieving international prominence in engineering, optics, education, and the physical, biological, social, environmental, and space sciences, as well as other selected programs.

    5. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 5 June 2, 2004 prominent adj. 1. Projecting outward or upward from a line or surface. 2. Immediately noticeable; conspicuous. 3.Widely known; eminent. (American Heritage Dictionary, 1996) who determines who is prominent? what are the key measures used for this judgment? what actions are anticipated when “rankings” are known? new strategies improve marketing? improve accomplishments? What is Prominence?

    6. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 6 June 2, 2004 What is Benchmarking? benchmark n. 1. A standard by which something can be measured or judged. 2. Often bench mark. A surveyors mark made on a stationary object of previously determined position and elevation and used as a reference point in tidal observations and surveys. --benchmark tr.v. To measure (a rival’s product) according to specified standards in order to compare it with and improve one’s own product. (American Heritage Dictionary, 1996)

    7. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 7 June 2, 2004 What is Benchmarking? the continuous process of measuring our products, services and business practices against the toughest competitors or those companies recognized as industry leaders (Xerox Corp.) a basis for establishing rational performance goals through the search for industry best practices that will lead to superior performance (Camp, 1989)

    8. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 8 June 2, 2004 What is Benchmarking? “benchmarking involves first examining and understanding your own internal work procedures, then searching for "best practices" in other organizations that match those you identified, and finally, adapting those practices within your organization to improve performance. It is, at bottom, a systematic way of learning from others and changing what you do.” (Epper, 1999) process for identifying gaps so that you can improve not about performance measurement or rankings although measures are used

    9. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 9 June 2, 2004 Baldridge Education Award “benchmarks” refer to processes and results that represent the best practices and performances for similar organizations, inside or outside of the education community. engage in benchmarking to understand current dimensions of world-class performance achieve discontinuous (nonincremental) or breakthrough improvement comparative data benchmarks are one form third party data performance data for competitors and comparable educational organizations similar organizations in same geographical area

    10. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 10 June 2, 2004 Benchmarking Menu (Spendolini, 1992)

    11. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 11 June 2, 2004 Approaches to Benchmarking problem-based when a problem comes up, you focus a benchmarking effort on the problem process-based focuses on the vital (few) business processes survey support process analysis support assessment support accepted as correct approach (Camp, 1995)

    12. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 12 June 2, 2004 Types of Benchmarking competitive benchmarking benchmarking against competitors typically requires customer input requires identification of competitors functional benchmarking benchmark against “best in class” in the operation or process of interest requires identification of “best in class”

    13. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 13 June 2, 2004 Types of Benchmarking (Continued) performance benchmarking process for identifying benchmarks and identifying stretch targets requires identification of key competitors or best in class strategic benchmarking process used for identifying world class standards, determining gaps in competitiveness, developing strategies, and remaining focused and aware of developments

    14. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 14 June 2, 2004 Another Classification external benchmarking focuses on identifying other institutions internal benchmarking focuses on similar processes inside the institution

    15. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 15 June 2, 2004 Approaches to Benchmarking problem-based or process-based types competitive functional performance strategic internal or external

    16. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 16 June 2, 2004 Related, But Not Benchmarking comparative analysis requires identification of comparables for whatever objective one has in mind, but not generally for improvement purposes key performance indicators (KPI) accountability measures institutional characteristics

    17. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 17 June 2, 2004 common use implies “comparison for _____,” not necessarily for process improvement initial efforts to identify “prominent” graduate programs some comparative analysis as part of academic program reviews limited process studies (e.g., transfer credit evaluation, 1996) Benchmarking “Experience” at UCF

    18. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 18 June 2, 2004 What Do We Want Benchmarking to Mean for Academic Programs? process improvement process benchmarking—comparison against “best-in-class” for a specified process external—admissions process internal—departmental advising practices comparative analysis curiosity, potentially leading toward process improvement competitive benchmarking—how are we doing relative to our “competitors”? (e.g., Florida schools admitting National Merit Scholars) best-in-class benchmarking—how are we doing relative to a specified class of comparable institutions? (e.g., Metropolitan Research Universities) world-class benchmarking—how do we rank among the best universities?

    19. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 19 June 2, 2004 Benchmarking Processes plan functions or processes to benchmark benchmark measures (key performance variables) who to benchmark (best-in-class, partner) collect data acquire data, observe analyze data identify actions to close gap adapt for improvement specify improvement programs and actions implement plans focus assessment—continuous improvement benchmarking—discontinuous improvement

    20. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 20 June 2, 2004 Approaches lone ranger third party data inference partner win-win mutual exchange on best-in-class processes data exchanges and visits consortium participant observer requires significant effort

    21. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 21 June 2, 2004 Practical Questions what do I measure (benchmark)? who do I compare to? what process should I use? where do I get data? answer: it depends on what you want to accomplish

    22. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 22 June 2, 2004 Measures primary determinant of measures is the purpose of the comparison process improvement comparison rankings prominence number and type of measures will depend on program or process will typically have multiple measures best-in-class will generally not be dominant on all measures identification of best-in-class is difficult

    23. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 23 June 2, 2004 Who Do I Compare To? identification of “class” peers—similar institutions differ by program differ by process requires insight and knowledge—no reference lists generally available comparables similar-sized operations in similar-sized institutions best-in class strong reputation

    24. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 24 June 2, 2004 What Process to Use? partner approach is good for non-competitors consortium is preferred approach for process improvement benchmarking

    25. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 25 June 2, 2004 Getting Benchmark Data published data reports websites information sharing establish relationship with benchmarks

    26. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 26 June 2, 2004 UCF Graduate “Programs of Prominence” strategic initiative—programs of prominence who determines who is prominent? what are the key measures used for this judgment? what actions are anticipated when “rankings” are known? new strategies improve marketing? improve accomplishments? how to identify candidate programs?

    27. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 27 June 2, 2004 Identifying Programs Dean’s recommendations selected programs Computer Science (MS, PhD) Counselor Education (MS, PhD) Criminal Justice (MS) Environmental Engineering (MS, PhD) Applied Experimental and Human Factors Psychology (MS, PhD) K-8 Math/Science Education (MS) Nursing (MS) Optics (MS, PhD)

    28. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 28 June 2, 2004 Process led by Vice Provost and Dean of Graduate Studies UAPS provided guidance and technical support initial meeting to define terms, set goals, evoke commitment ($$$) agreement on common measures bi-weekly progress meetings templates report data formats Dean “sign-offs” on approach, measures, results final report follow-up meetings to develop action plans

    29. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 29 June 2, 2004 Candidate Benchmark Institutions types of Institutions best in class top institutions unique institutions peer institutions direct competitors where to find them general knowledge within the discipline rankings in discipline-specific association journals US News discipline rankings

    30. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 30 June 2, 2004 Benchmark Institutions Counselor Education U Minnesota Indiana U UNC Greensboro U of MD College Park U South Carolina Kent State Portland State Criminal Justice U Louisville Michigan State SUNY Albany Cal State LB Rutgers U Georgia State U Cincinnati UNC Charlotte Optics Stanford U MIT UC Berkeley 5 others didn’t respond U Arizona U Rochester K-8 Math/Science Ed UC Berkeley U Wisconsin Madison Ohio State Clemson Oregon State Hofstra George Mason San Diego State 5 others didn’t respond Human Factors U Ill. Urbana Champaign George Mason U Georgia Tech U Cincinnati New Mexico State NC State Wright State Computer Science UC Berkeley UCLA NYU Columbia U Duke U

    31. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 31 June 2, 2004 What Measures? both program characteristics and performance measures national studies National Research Council US News and World Report TheCenter Report discipline-specific studies (e.g., American Association of Colleges of Nursing) varies by program set of core measures for all programs discipline specific measures looked at both raw data and ratios

    32. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 32 June 2, 2004 Sample Benchmark Measures faculty characteristics # of faculty # of society fellows # of national awards # of publications # of faculty publishing # of faculty with research support amount of external and federal funding student characteristics # of students # of minority students # of international students GRE scores # of students supported (GTAs, GRAs) # of national fellowships (other fellowships) program characteristics # of degrees awarded amount of lab space

    33. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 33 June 2, 2004 Where’s the Data? if program is general enough national studies discipline specific studies number of graduates from IPEDS if program is more narrowly defined (e.g., environmental engineering) more difficult to find data program data is grouped with other programs (e.g., civil engineering) or departments (e.g., optics) create consortiums or partnerships request data directly from colleagues

    34. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 34 June 2, 2004 How To Get the Data?

    35. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 35 June 2, 2004 How To Get the Data? department representative contacted colleagues sent template (with program specific questions) via email followed up with multiple phone calls took 2-3 months to gather data not all benchmark programs cooperated attempt to fill in missing pieces web of science for publications (labor intensive) search discipline-specific journals search university web pages follow-up with colleagues

    36. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 36 June 2, 2004 How To Organize The Data?

    37. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 37 June 2, 2004 Comparison Methods look at summary data to develop impressions of where programs “ranked” analytic approaches dominance ranking primary method used data envelopment analysis (DEA) hierarchical “weight and rate” approach

    38. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 38 June 2, 2004 Dominance Ranking based on an approach used in TheCenter's annual report, The Top American Research Universities classification of universities into groups based upon quality indicators method relies on counts of the number of times that a university is included in the top 25 on a given measure or in the second group (26-50) number of counts of those occurrences in the first tier or second tier are used to group or rank the institutions see http://thecenter.ufl.edu/

    39. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 39 June 2, 2004 Dominance Ranking UCF graduate programs are compared to 6-10 other graduate programs comparable approach is to rank order the programs for each measure and use that ranking to determine in which tier each program falls Tier 1 ranked number one or two Tier 2 ranked number three or four Tier 3 ranked below number four uses counts of those occurrences, ranking first by the number of counts in Tier 1, then by the counts in Tier 2, and then by the counts in Tier 3

    40. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 40 June 2, 2004 Dominance Ranking data acquisition and limitations methodology depends on having consistent data serious limitation associated with missing data missing data results in a university not being ranked on those given measures (equivalent to being in Tier 3) for an otherwise highly ranked university, missing data will necessarily lower its rank assumes that each measure is equally important could conduct the analysis using only those measures for which complete data are available the overall ranking needs to be used with care

    41. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 41 June 2, 2004 Example Faculty Summary

    42. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 42 June 2, 2004 Example Student Summary

    43. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 43 June 2, 2004 Example Program Summary

    44. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 44 June 2, 2004 Data Envelopment Analysis multi-dimensional approach analyzes inputs and outputs assesses overall effectiveness advantages assigns mathematically optimal weights simultaneous comparisons of performance measures calculates “distance” from “best-practice” organizations efficiency weighted sum of outputs (more is better) divided by weighted sum of inputs (less is better) find best set of weights to maximize efficiency—best possible case—use Solver in Excel (linear program)

    45. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 45 June 2, 2004 Sample Excel DEA Output

    46. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 46 June 2, 2004 Weight and Rate Approach identify key benchmark measures create hierarchy to group similar dimensions develop weights for each measure to determine relative importance use any decision analysis method pairwise comparisons--Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP) use value of measure or separate evaluation to rate institution on the measure compute overall “score” to rank institutions

    47. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 47 June 2, 2004 Rating Hierarchy

    48. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 48 June 2, 2004 Results programs used the results of the dominance rankings to identify what areas were competitive with other top institutions (i.e., faculty productivity) and what areas needed improvement (i.e., number of faculty) programs submitted a report which included: programs benchmarked measures used results of the dominance ranking plan of action review held with Vice Provost of Graduate Studies to further refine action plans

    49. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 49 June 2, 2004 Action Plans identified what was needed to elevate the program to prominence examples: # of additional faculty needed necessary increases in faculty productivity revise recruitment strategies market the program increase in lab space increase financial support for students identified areas where additional data was needed breakdown of masters vs. doctoral benchmark clinical costs

    50. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 50 June 2, 2004 How Will the Results Be Used? assist programs to get the help they need marketing recruiting provides documentation and support for requesting additional funds and university specials strategic plan provides justification for additional funding and support for those programs identified as “programs at or near national or international prominence”

    51. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 51 June 2, 2004 Resources Internal sources: IR: http://pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/%7Eirps/character/current.html OEAS: http://www.oeas.ucf.edu/benchmarking.htm UAPS: http://www.uaps.ucf.edu/benchmarking.html Websites to Universities: IR Offices: http://airweb.org/links/offices.cfm Florida Colleges and Universities: http://iea.fau.edu/fair/flacol.htm Florida Colleges and Universities IR Offices: http://iea.fau.edu/fair/flair.htm Southern Association IR Offices: http://sair.org/Resources/Links.htm#SAIR%20IR%20Office%20Web%20Sites Coalition of Urban & Metropolitan Universities: http://cumu.uc.iupui.edu

    52. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 52 June 2, 2004 Resources Websites to Industry Resources: Higher Education Associations: http://iea.fau.edu/fair/edasoc.htm Higher Education Research Centers: http://iea.fau.edu/fair/edres.htm Institutional Research Internet Resources: http://www.airweb3.org/air-new/page.asp?page=21 http://airweb.org/links/linkmap.html The Learning Alliance for Higher Education: http://www.thelearningalliance.info/index.php National Center for Educational Statistics: http://www.nces.ed.gov/ National Organizations: http://oeas.ucf.edu/related_links.htm

    53. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 53 June 2, 2004 Resources Websites to Data: Common Data Sets: http://airweb.org/links/cds.cfm Census Data: http://airweb.org/links/census.cfm Data Warehousing: http://airweb.org/links/datawarehouse.cfm Enrollment Statistics: http://airweb.org/links/enroll.cfm Environmental Scanning: http://airweb.org/links/scanning.cfm Peer Comparison Data: http://airweb.org/links/peers.cfm Performance Indicators: http://airweb.org/links/indicators.cfm Statistics/Research Methods: http://airweb.org/links/stats.cfm Southern Universities-Common Data Sets: http://sair.org/Resources/Links.htm#SAIR%20School%20Common%20Datasets Resource Identification for Programs: http://oeas.ucf.edu/SourceID.html

    54. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 54 June 2, 2004 Resources Websites to Data: Resource Sheet Identifying available data elements: http://oeas.ucf.edu/InstitutionResourceSheet.html Variables Available About Specific Programs: http://oeas.ucf.edu/VariablesAvailableAboutSpecificPrograms.html Population Characteristics: http://site.conway.com/ez/ Student Characteristics: http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/ http://www.usnews.com/usnews/edu/college/coworks.htm Faculty Characteristics: http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/ Financial Characteristics: http://nces.ed.gov/ipeds/ Research Characteristics: http://www.nsf.gov http://caspar.nsf.gov/cgi-bin/WebIC.exe?template=nsf/srs/webcasp/start.wi List of Published Rankings: http://oeas.ucf.edu/PublishedRankings.html List of Program Rankings: http://oeas.ucf.edu/ProgramRankings.html

    55. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 55 June 2, 2004 Resources Websites to Benchmarking Literature: American Productivity and Quality Center: http://www.apqc.org/best/ Ebenchmarking: http://ebenchmarking.com/ (note: scroll down page for list of additional resources including industry specific) Consortium for Higher Education Benchmarking Analysis: http://www.cheba.com/ National AAU Peer Benchmarking for Quality: http://www.ir.ufl.edu/compare/intro.htm

    56. Benchmarking Academic Program: Methods and Examples 56 June 2, 2004 Questions Ms. Alicia L. Wilson Assistant Director, University Analysis and Planning Support University of Central Florida 12424 Research Parkway, Suite 215 Orlando, FL 32826-3207 407-882-0287 awilson@mail.ucf.edu http://uaps.ucf.edu Contacts: Dr. Robert L. Armacost Director, University Analysis and Planning Support University of Central Florida 12424 Research Parkway, Suite 215 Orlando, FL 32826-3207 407-882-0286 armacost@mail.ucf.edu http://uaps.ucf.edu

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