Transcript Slide 1

Strategies for Implementing Reviews of Student
Learning in a Decentralized Environment
Sharon A. La Voy
Office of Institutional Research, Planning and Assessment
What We’ll Cover Today
History of assessment at UM
UM challenges
Structure UM put in place
Resources made available
Development of process
New campus context
Successes and lessons learned
Previous Assessment at UM
Specialized Accreditation
Engineering – ABET
Education – NCATE
Business – AACSB
Campus Assessment Working Group (CAWG)
Student satisfaction
Describing student experiences
Data-Supported Decisions
Program reviews
Budget planning cycle
Task forces
Course evaluations
Middle States Developments
PRR highlighted CAWG’s efforts
Team’s evaluation encouraged UM to make
progress on learning outcomes
General lack of awareness of scope of this
recommendation
Middle States numbers: Previous to new
standard, 20-30% further review; post new
standard, 70-80%
What is the New Expectation?
Standard 14: Assessment of Student Learning
Assessment of student learning demonstrates that
the institution’s students have knowledge, skills,
and competencies consistent with institutional
goals and that students at graduation have
achieved appropriate higher education goals.
An accredited institution is…
Characterized by…
Articulated expectations of student learning at
various levels (institution, degree/program,
course) that are consonant with the
institution’s mission
A plan that describes student learning
assessment activities being undertaken at the
institution
Evidence that assessment information is used
to improve teaching and learning
Others Following Suit
State pressures to conform to common
standards
Modifications of professional school
standards
Some at the University interested in telling
our story in language other than input factors
Challenges to Overcome
Few strong research university examples, for
understandable reasons
Threat of failed reaccreditation suspicious
Size of the institution
Common outcomes for Theater and Electrical
Engineering?
Decentralized culture
Many Tasks
Institution-wide common outcomes
And are these the same as our CORE
general education program?
Program-specific outcomes
Course outcomes
Assessment of all
We began with what we could control…
A Centrally Validated Structure…
The Provost’s Commission on
Learning Outcomes Assessment:
The Planning Team (two IR staff and four
faculty administrators)
The Deans Steering Committee
The Faculty Working Group
The College Coordinator Committee
The Deans Steering Committee
Chaired by the Undergraduate Dean
Deans of prominent colleges asked to serve
We work out details with them
Introduce decisions to Council of Deans and
community with them already on board
They nominated faculty to Working Group
(we asked for strong faculty with vibrant
research agendas)
The Faculty Working Group
Chaired by the Undergraduate Dean
Tasked with writing outcomes for Middle
States “Five Essential Elements” of an
undergraduate education (in addition to Gen
Ed and disciplines)
Met for a semester, reviewed other
institutions’ goals, worked out language
Rolling Out to the Programs
Could show progress at University level
Provost distributed Faculty Working Group
results, and said ALL programs must follow
Back to Deans Steering Committee
Process has to be owned in the Colleges
I envisioned programs submitting centrally;
but that would not honor College control
They appoint College Coordinator for each
College Coordinators
Sharing of experiences
Honest critique of all work
Peer review
Seminar-type discussions on issues
Ground rules for privacy and sharing work
College Process
Organize learning outcomes assessment
process internally (College Coordinators and
Deans)
Consider whether there are common Collegewide outcome goals
Review department and program plans for
consistency with College standards for quality
Submit all assembled Assessment Plans under
the signature of the Dean to the Provost
Resources Made Available
Planning Team always available for
presentations and consultations
Registration for local (thankfully) Middle
States assessment conference funded
Learning outcomes workshops with nationally
renowned speakers for Coordinators; all
faculty and staff invited to keynote addresses
www.umd.edu/LearningOutcomes
Developments
Program Plans submitted in Spring 2006
400 plans split up among teams of
Coordinators and reviewed using rubric
Coordinators provide written feedback instead
of rubric results, deleting ‘judgments’
Overall and program specific feedback sent to
Deans from Provost
Developments
Revisions to plans submitted in Fall
Plans for assessments this academic year
Deans Steering Committee – Colleges decide
how they do this within a 4 year cycle
Results and projected curriculum changes
submitted in March, after accreditation visit
Reviewed by Coordinators, feedback given to
colleges
Survey of Coordinators
What was the most important experience you had in working
with your college?
The language of evaluation has changed in my college.
There is a larger sense of a shared commitment to our
students.
There is a shared sense of the value of articulating the
learning outcome goals.
Faculty have been very cooperative.
I have shared good ideas from other disciplines with my
college.
We can meet our own needs and the needs of accrediting
agencies at the same time.
Survey of Coordinators
What was most important to you in participating in the
College Coordinator group?
A well-directed and focused committee can get a lot done.
A committed group can take on a challenging project, work
hard, and succeed.
Communication across campus with different disciplines
increased my understanding.
The assessment rubric for graduate programs that was
distributed helps us a lot.
Survey of Coordinators
What was most problematic for you in this process?
Getting agreement on the assessment of graduate programs.
Finding the time.
Adding this to our workload.
Survey of Coordinators
What is the overall result for you and your college?
There have been significant new conversations about how to
change teaching.
Faculty have changed their syllabi.
We wonder if the university will continue this process.
Successes and Milestones
Utilizing groups to their utmost capacity
College Coordinators act as community of
scholars
Reported “brainwashing” of some as they
come to understand value of learning
outcomes assessment
CORE faculty committee saw benefits and
established general education learning
outcomes with little resistance
Examples of CORE outcomes
Demonstrate critical analysis of arguments
and evaluation of an argument’s major
assertions, its background assumptions, the
evidence used to support its assertions, and
its explanatory utility
Understand and articulate the importance and
influence of diversity within and among
cultures and societies
CORE Assessment Milestones
In 2005, faculty
groups articulated
student learning
outcomes for all
CORE categories.
In 2006, faculty
who teach CORE
courses mapped
their courses to
published CORE
outcomes by using
“checklists.”
New Campus Context
New programs
New CORE courses
Program Review
Focus on graduate programs
College-based development of assessment
instruments and measures
Lessons Learned
In one instance, not utilizing established
structures for buy-in and gentle roll-out
caused relative uproar
Successes in one venue will influence others
Giving up control of process is necessary
Utilizing existing structures essential
Questions,
comments, and
discussion
welcome!