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Outcomes Assessment

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Title: Outcomes Assessment


1
Outcomes Assessment
  • UNL Deans Retreat
  • October 3, 2000
  • Jessica L. Jonson, Ph.D.
  • University-Wide Assessment Coordinator
  • and
  • Thomas C. Calhoun, Ph.D.
  • Interim Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic
    Affairs

2
NCA Statements Handbook of
Accreditation, NCA-CIHE, 1997
  • the Commission reaffirmed its expectation that
    all affiliated institutions have ongoing programs
    for assessing academic achievement both to assure
    that students are learning what faculty intend to
    teach and to identify ways to improve the
    instruction.
  • the Commission is committed to the tenet that
    assessment of student academic achievement is the
    key to improving student learning (it) is
    critical to the future health of its
    institutions, to the educational accomplishments
    of students now and in the future, and to the
    enhanced perception of the public of the value of
    higher education.

3
Making Outcomes Assessment Work for UNL
  • Clarifying Purpose
  • Outlining Benefits
  • Identifying Resources

4
Principles of Good Practice for Assessing Student
Learning
  • American Association for Higher Education (AAHE),
    1992

5
Principle 1 Assessing What Matters Most
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • an exercise in valuing what can be measured.
  • Assessment IS
  • process of measuring what is valued.

6
Principle 2 Complete and Accurate Picture of
Learning
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • simply measuring core content.
  • Assessment IS
  • measuring integrative reasoning and attitudes
    dispositions.

7
Principle 3 Starts with Existing Goals and
Activities
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • an add-on process unrelated to our existing
    goals and activities.
  • Assessment IS
  • a goal-oriented process based on evidence
    existing within the current curriculum.

8
Principle 4 Linking Outcomes and Processes
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • only about where students end up
  • Assessment IS
  • about linking outcomes to the experiences that
    lead them there.

9
Principle 5 Assessment Evolves
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • episodic.
  • Assessment IS
  • ongoing.

10
Principle 6 Collaborative Endeavor
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • an activity conducted by individuals to focus on
    individuals (i.e. courses, faculty, or students).
  • Assessment IS
  • a collaborative activity between all participants
    who have a stake in an academic program.

11
Principle 7 Making Evidence Meaningful
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • gathering data and returning results.
  • Assessment IS
  • illuminating questions of interest using existing
    evidence.

12
Principle 8 Used in Decision Making
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • only focusing on what.
  • Assessment IS
  • focusing on the what-you-do-with-it.

13
Principle 9 Public Accountability
  • Assessment IS NOT
  • just reporting outcomes information to the
    public.
  • Assessment IS...
  • deeper obligation - to ourselves, students, and
    society - to improve.

14
Benefits for Engaging in Outcomes Assessment
15
Benefit 1 Faculty become primary decision-makers
  • Setting goals
  • Identifying processes to assess goals
  • Determining whether goals have been reached
  • Recommending future directions

16
Benefit 2 Better understanding of learning
throughout curriculum
  • Eliminate curriculum redundancies
  • Add overlooked topics
  • Better utilize existing resources
  • Justify additional resources

17
Benefit 3 Richer Data
  • Engage in more productive conversations
  • Make better decisions
  • Faculty greater satisfaction in their work
  • Effectively document strengths
  • Identify directions for future development.

18
Benefit 4 Reliable Evidence
  • Rely less on FTE and student evaluations
  • Make reliable decisions about innovations or
    experimental projects
  • Evidence used to easily and effectively share
    successes

19
Resources For Outcomes Assessment
20
Personnel Resources
  • University-Wide Assessment Coordinator Teaching
    and Learning Center (TLC)individual
    consultations and workshopsresources
    literature, examples, and tools

21
Financial Resources
  • Teaching Council Grants

22
Informational Resources
  • SVCAA Website

23
Communication Resources
  • University-Wide Assessment Steering Committee

24
Summary of Benefits
  • Empowers Faculty
  • Enhances Understanding Learning Throughout
    Curriculum
  • Provides Richer Data about Effects Educational
    Programs
  • Creates More Reliable Evidence

25
Conclusion
  • Evaluates student learning across a programs
    curriculum
  • Focuses on the improvements of student learning
  • Emphasizes using information about the difference
    a program makes in their students lives

26
Questions to Think About
  • Given that we should consider outcomes assessment
    a legitimate endeavor in which to engage, how is
    your college emphasizing the importance of
    outcomes assessment to its faculty?
  • For example,
  • Are departments/programs recognized for engaging
    in effective assessment processes?
  • Does your college use assessment evidence in its
    own decision making?
  • Are faculty being provided opportunities to
    develop the skills they need to implement an
    effective assessment plan?
  • Does the colleges budget contain a line item for
    assessment?
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