1 / 29

Connecting Public Audiences to the College Experience: A Model of General Education Assessment

Connecting Public Audiences to the College Experience: A Model of General Education Assessment . Susan L. Davis James Madison University. A. Katherine Morrow Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis. Objectives.

oleg
Download Presentation

Connecting Public Audiences to the College Experience: A Model of General Education Assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Connecting Public Audiences to the College Experience: A Model of General Education Assessment Susan L. Davis James Madison University A. Katherine Morrow Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis

  2. Objectives • Discuss the challenges and rewards of implementing general education assessment programs • Learn different methods of general education assessment and examine components of methods that are applicable to your campus • Begin developing a strategy to implement general education assessment on your campus

  3. Importance of General Education Assessment • Provides evidence of accountability to stakeholders • Demonstrates student learning in core areas valued by the institution • General Education composes a substantial amount of a students’ college education

  4. Obstacles to implementing such an assessment • Creating campus culture of assessment • Articulating general education goals • Balancing manageable work-groups with soliciting faculty involvement • Distinguishing where and when students obtain such skills • Choosing the appropriate method

  5. A Look at General Education Assessment Methods • Portfolios • Course embedded assessments • Surveys • Commercial tests • Locally-developed tests • Hybrid

  6. Portfolios • A type of performance assessment in which students’ work is systematically collected and carefully reviewed for evidence of learning and development– Banta • Examples of student work • ‘Real-world’ assessment

  7. Portfolios • Samples • Collected from all, only a sample are analyzed • Collected from just a sample • Types • Performance [music, art] • Class projects • Writing samples

  8. Portfolios • Advantages • Richness of material • Students’ original work • Disadvantages • Intense work • Creating • Analyzing • Storing • Often have to rely on a sample assessment • Reliability and validity can be harder to establish

  9. Use of portfolios in general education assessment • Alverno College • Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI) • Truman State University – Liberal Arts and Sciences Portfolio

  10. Course-embedded Assessments • In course-embedded assessment faculty members demonstrate through course assignments, papers, and exams that students are meeting the general education goals. • Faculty must have some sort of assignment in which students can demonstrate their abilities in relation to the general education goal.

  11. Course-embedded Assessments • Advantages • Flexibility for faculty • No additional time required from students • Faster and more focused feedback • Evaluation at the student level, course level, and program level • Disadvantages • Time consuming/ labor intensive for faculty • Must be aggregated • Instruments may need to be developed • May not show overall learning of a student (ability to integrate knowledge)

  12. Use of course-embedded assessments in general education • California State University – Bakersfield • http://www.csub.edu/assessmentcenter/reports/reports/ge/ScienceGEReport_6_00.htm • University of Northern Colorado • http://www.unco.edu/general_education/cea.htm

  13. Surveys • A survey is a method of collecting information from people about their characteristics, behaviors, attitudes, or perceptions. - Banta • Often used to assess • Opinion • Demographics

  14. Surveys • Samples • Students who have completed general education requirement • Graduating students • Alumni • Employers • Topics • Perceptions of learning from an individual course • Development of general education skills • Perceptions of general education program • Value of classes

  15. Surveys • Advantages • Easy to administer • Low-stakes ~ no concern for test security • Easy to conduct in many formats • Cover a numerous amount of topics • Disadvantages • Motivation for honesty? • No direct measure of learning • Volunteer sample

  16. Use of surveys in general education assessment • Western Carolina University • Skill self-assessment • Weber state University • Completion of gen-ed survey • Cleveland State University • Senior survey • IUPUI • NSSE

  17. Commercial instruments • Commercially available instruments are should have strong psychometric properties • General education goals must be articulated and the instrument must measure those goals • Instruments can be used to measure overall learning or broad skills as well as a single area such as mathematical reasoning or critical thinking • Some popular commercially available instruments: • College BASE • CAAP • ACT Comp • Academic Profile

  18. Commercial instruments • Advantages • Readily available and easy to use • Provides information about psychometric evidence • Can compare institutions • Disadvantages • Instruments may not measure the institutions goals • Cost • Campus psychometric evidence must be established • Skepticism among faculty

  19. Use of commercial instruments in general education assessment • East Tennessee State University – Academic Profile • Missouri – College BASE • Ferris State University – Academic Profile

  20. Locally developed instruments • Difficulty in finding an instrument to suit your needs • Create your own!

  21. Locally developed instruments • Pros • Perfectly match your objectives • Control over scoring & reporting • After developments -> minimal costs • Cons • Time consuming • Resources: • Test development know-how • Content experts

  22. Use of locally-developed instruments in general education assessment • James Madison University • Appalachian State University

  23. Hybrid methods • Many colleges use a combination of methods to measure gen ed goals • Ferris State University – CSEQ & Academic Profile, surveys & Locally developed instruments • University Wisconsin-Madison – course embedded for quantitative skills & NSSE

  24. Choosing a model that works: Things to consider • What is the scope of your general education program? • What resources do you have available to start up a general education assessment program? • What are you going to do with your results?

  25. Developing your own tool • Many institutions want to develop their own instruments. • Instruments may be developed for overall learning, a focused subject area • This is a challenging, but rewarding process and the journey begins here!

  26. Creating an assessment strategy • Describe the current general education program on your campus. • Does the general education program have stated goals and objectives? If so, what are they? • Describe the campus culture toward assessment. Is assessment a Who are your allies in assessment planning and execution? • Pros, Cons, and Use of assessment methods • What obstacles may prevent an assessment plan from working? • How might those obstacles be overcome? • Who can I contact for more information?

  27. Conclusion • Questions • Comments

  28. References Bers, T. (2000). Assessing the achievement of general education objectives: A college-wide approach. The Journal of General Education, 49 (3), American Council of Trustees and Alumni (2004). The hollow core. Failure of the general education curriculum.

  29. Contact Us Katie MorrowPlanning & Institutional Improvement Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolisannmorro@iupui.edu Susan Davis Center for Assessment and Research Studies James Madison University davissl@jmu.edu

More Related