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Assessing%20Developmental%20English

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Title: Assessing%20Developmental%20English


1
Assessing Developmental English
  • Lucia Lachmayr, Ariel Vigo, Karen Wong
  • Strengthening Student Success Conference
  • San Jose, CA
  • October 3-5, 2007

2
Workshop SLOs
  • Describe the Skyline College English Departments
    approach to assessing developmental English.
  • Identify the problems we encountered to
    anticipate problems that may come up in your own
    assessment process.
  • Determine what you may want to adapt for your own
    course level assessment.

3
QUESTIONS
  • How can we keep this process manageable yet still
    worthwhile?
  • How can we integrate assessment into our daily
    classroom practices?
  • How can we balance academic freedom with
    requiring faculty to be consistent in their
    curriculum?
  • How can we convince our colleagues to get
    involved?
  • How can we improve teaching and learning through
    assessment?

4
Assessment Plan Guiding Principles
  • Triangulation
  • - 3 different assignments or activities to gather
    data on student achievement.

5
Assessment Plan Guiding Principles
  • Direct and Indirect Measures
  • Direct Assessment require students to display
    their knowledge or skills (essays, exams,
    homework, etc.)
  • Indirect Assessment requires students (or
    others) to reflect on their learning (number of
    student hours spent on homework, in conference,
    etc opinions perceptions from surveys
    retention success data from department)

6
Assessment Plan Guiding Principles
  • Formative Summative Measures
  • Formative Assessment generates feedback for
    improvement in working towards a final
    performance (in-class assignments, outlines,
    discussion, etc.)
  • Summative Assessment a final determination of
    knowledge or skills any evaluation that is not
    created to provide feedback for improvement but
    is used only for final judgments (final exams or
    essays)

7
Assessment Plan Guiding Principles
  • Quantitative vs. Qualitative
  • - assessment does not always have to be
    quantitative (numerical scales or rubrics)
    sometimes performances or narratives may be
    better expressions of student learning.


8
Assessment Plan Implementation Lessons Learned
9
Identifying the Gaps in Assessment
  • Example In attempting to come up with valuable
    forms of indirect assessment, we realized we had
    never surveyed students.

10
Importance of Piloting
  • Running through the process on a smaller scale
    allows us to troubleshoot, revise, and to see
    what is manageable before we begin assessing on a
    larger scale.

11
Simplifying the Process
  • In an effort to simplify the process cut back
    on labor involved, we have attempted to use one
    source of data to examine multiple SLOs where
    possible.

12
Purpose of the Survey
  • Assess all of our SLOs.
  • Provide an indirect assessment measure.
  • Generate data for our program as a whole and at
    each level.
  • Enable students to assess their learning.
  • Provide data for Program Review.

13
Administering the Survey
  • Articulate the survey statements in language that
    is clear and easily accessible to students.
  • Administer to at least 33 of the total number of
    students taking a core composition course, and at
    least 33 of each level with at least 100
    respondents.
  • Work closely with the Institutional Research
    Office.
  • Establish benchmark that 70 of respondents will
    agree/strongly agree with the statements

14
What is your current education goal?
15
Overall essay unity/thesis Write focused,
coherent, well-developed, largely text-based
essays appropriate to the developmental level,
organized into effective paragraphs with major
and minor supporting details, which support a
clear thesis statement, and demonstrate
competence in standard English grammar and
usage.
16
Critical reading/writing/thinking Demonstrate
critical reading, writing, and thinking skills
through analysis, synthesis, and evaluation of
important ideas from multiple points of view.
17
Critical reading/writing/thinking Apply basic
research and documentation skills.
18
Metacognition Perceive themselves as improved
writers and thinkers engaging in academic
discourse in cross-disciplinary contexts.
19
Q11 I am better able to support my opinions
with evidence as a result of this class.
20
Assessment PlanStudent Essays
  • Direct measure
  • Summative assessment
  • Collection of text-based essays from one of the
    last two persuasive essays of the semester
  • Benchmark criteria 70 will achieve 2

21
Purpose of the Rubric
Purpose of the Rubric
  • Assess the first three of our SLOs.
  • Generate data for our program as a whole and at
    each level.
  • Enable faculty to gauge, as well as reflect on,
    their assessments.
  • Allow for more consistency in assessment
    throughout the department.
  • Create a set of criteria that is transparent to
    students.
  • Provide data for Program Review.

22
Holistic Scoring and Rubrics
  • Initial qualms from faculty
  • Feared scrutiny (either as contributors or as
    scorers of the essays).
  • Wondered if the scoring of their essays would be
    a source of critique of their classes
  • Brought up issues of academic freedom

23
Challenges of Rubric
  • Whether or not to weave in new ideas such as
    voice.
  • Whether critical thinking was adequately
    addressed
  • Making the rubric accessible to students
  • Difficulties in using the rubric with particular
    prompts (i.e. fact-based research essay, overly
    rhetorically challenging assignments)

24
Methods for Holistic Scoring
  • Used a 4-point Likert Scale in rubric
  • 4excellent, 3good, 2adequate, 1not passing
  • Normed the data at the ends of the scale first,
    the most successful (4s) and the not passing
    essays (1s), to create a clear distinction
    between high and low scores.
  • Assessment subcommittee chose sample 1s, 2s,
    3s and 4s.
  • Normed the sample essays with faculty.

25
Problems with Scoring
  • Difficulty in differentiating between 2s and 3s
    (in committee and as an entire faculty)
  • Discrepancy between the scores in the middle.
  • Instructors urge to add pluses and minuses to
    the scores skewed results slightly.
  • Some of the research essays did not lend
    themselves well to the rubric and had to be taken
    out of the sample.
  • Norming was supposed to precede scoring but we
    ended up solely norming, so had to divide up
    scoring amongst fewer faculty afterwards.

26
Data
  • First round of norming had general consensus the
    second round fell apart because essays deviated
    too much from the assessment plan criteria.
  • We had approximately 30 essays left after
    norming, to be scored by 10 different faculty
    members.
  • These remaining essays had a generally much
    higher pass rate (approx. 2.7).
  • This preliminary data suggests that given the
    appropriate assignments, the rubric can be used
    as a reliable means by which to determine success
    in achieving the SLOs for the English 836
    writing course.

27
Comparing Data Scores
28
High Scores vs. Low Scores
29
Results of Data
  • Most students scored above a 2.
  • The average median score given was a 2.
  • The student success rate was varied depending on
    the assignment.
  • Approximately half of the assignments contributed
    were not appropriate to the level.
  • Rates of success were higher (2.7) when the
    students were given an assignment appropriate to
    the level.
  • Raises the question of whether students are not
    passing their courses due to assignments
    inappropriate to the level.

30
Lessons Learned
  • Finding sufficient samples from a variety of
    instructors, though select faculty were kind
    enough to contribute.
  • Problems with essay prompts and readings that are
    not appropriate to the level.
  • Took out several of the essays that were derived
    from an inappropriate prompt (Ex one was overly
    rhetorically challenging, one was a research
    paper with insufficient analysis)
  • We were left with two sources and thus did not
    have a comparative set.
  • The importance of piloting the essays first, so
    can work out incongruities on a smaller scale.

31
Assessment Plan Wrap Up
  • Ties back in to support SLOAC purposes.
  • Increases faculty dialogue in the area of
    assessment.
  • Helps to better align curricula within the
    department.
  • Ultimately, helps students to more successfully
    navigate each subsequent level in their English
    courses at Skyline.

32
Future Plans
  • Expand the assessment to include more faculty
    with a wider variety of essay assignments so that
    we can get statistically significant data.
  • Perhaps use random essays from all sections to
    have a greater range of faculty assignments
    without actually assessing all essays within all
    courses.
  • Begin the cycle to include all levels of core
    transfer and pre-transfer English courses in
    assessment.
  • Eventually involve all core courses from across
    the disciplines.
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