Title: College Portraits: Holding Ourselves Accountable
1College PortraitsHolding Ourselves Accountable
- Presented by Richard H. Wells, Chancellor, UW
Oshkosh and Chair, VSA Student Engagement Task
Force - September 2007
2- Voluntary System of Accountability (VSA) Goals
- Redefine what is important when choosing a
college - Make it easy to find this information
- Respond to concerns raised by the Spellings
Commission - Standardize presentation to ease criticisms
about comparable information availability - Add process and outcome measures to what is
reported
32 Associations 83 Participants 110 Monitors 4
Meeting Rounds High Transparency Funded by a
Lumina Foundation Education grant
4VSA Web Page
- VSA will include transparent information about
each participating university and its programs
utilizing common definitions and format. - Each universitys VSA web page will include
- descriptive data about the university, the
programs offered and characteristics of its
students, - a mechanism for the students to calculate their
estimated net cost of attendance, - various success measures such as graduation rates
and continued enrollment of students who transfer
into other universities, - a measures of post graduation plans,
- direct learning outcome measurement of the
value-added by the university to undergraduates
in the areas of critical thinking, analytic
reasoning and written communications ability, - indicators of the engagement exhibited by the
campus students in several strategic areas.
5Student Engagement Task Force
- A large body of research clearly documents the
types of student engagement activities and
programs that are known to contribute to student
learning and development - Active learning experiences
- Group learning experiences
- Institutional commitment for student learning and
success - Educationally purposeful student interaction with
campus faculty and staff - Experiences with diverse groups of people and
ideas - Student satisfaction with overall undergraduate
experience
6Model of Factors that Impact Student Learning and
Growth
7Student Engagement
- Student engagement occurs at the intersection of
student behaviors and institutional conditions. -
- Assessment of student engagement experiences will
require periodic (at least once every 3 years)
administration of - NSSE
- CIRP
- CSEQ or
- U-CUES.
- Instrument choice is up to the institution.
Administration is for new freshmen and
about-to-graduate seniors.
8Student Behaviors
- Interaction with Faculty
- Student-faculty interaction is important because
it encourages students to devote effort to other
educationally purposeful activities. Both the
nature and the frequency of the contact matter. - The evidence suggests that student-faculty
interactions outside the classroom that reinforce
or extends the formal academic experience or that
focus on issues of student development can have
positive effects on dimensions of general
cognitive development - for example, working on a
professors research project. - Student contact with faculty members outside the
classroom also promotes student persistence,
educational aspiration, and degree completion
even when other factors are taken into account. - Informal, social interactions between faculty and
students appear to have less of an impact on
student learning. - The material presented in this and the next 10
slides is taken directly from Christine Kellers
white paper, Student Behaviors and Institutional
Conditions that contribute to Student Learning,
which provides a broad overview of the literature.
9Student Behaviors
- Peer Interaction
- Peers are the single more potent source of
influence on virtually every aspect of
development cognitive, affective,
psychological, and behavioral (Astin 1992, p.
398). - Peer influence is a statistically significant and
positive force in students persistence
decisions. - Interaction with peers that extend and reinforce
broad ideas introduced in the academic experience
and that confront the individual with diverse
interests, values, political beliefs, and
cultural norms appear the most salient for
positive impact on critical thinking, analytical
skills, and post-formal reasoning. - Specific peer interactions that foster learning
include the following (Kuh et al. 2007). - Discussing core content with other students
- Working on group projects with other students
- Teaching or tutoring other students
- Participating in intramural sports
- Discussing racial or ethnic issues
- Socializing with someone from a different racial
or ethnic group - Being elected to a student office
10Student Behaviors
- Experience with Diversity
- Student involvement in diversity experiences has
a positive effect on dimensions of general
cognitive development such as critical thinking,
analytical competencies and thinking complexity
as well as academic subject matter for students
of all racial groups. However, there is evidence
that White students benefit more from diversity
experiences than African American or Hispanic
students. - Salient diversity experiences include informal
interaction with racially and culturally diverse
peers as well as involvement with more formal
programs such racial cultural awareness workshops
and coursework focusing on social cultural
diversity and interracial relations. Research
suggests that formal programs and coursework have
a more significant effect on White students than
informal interactions.
11Student Behaviors
- Service Learning
- Involvement in academically integrated service
learning has a unique positive impact on
dimensions of general cognitive development such
as critical thinking, analytical competencies and
thinking complexity as well as academic subject
matter knowledge - The most effective service learning experiences
appear to be those that integrate service with
course content, provide for reflection about the
service experience and permit the student to
apply subject matter learning to the service
experience and vice versa. - Not only does participation in academically
integrated service learning increase general and
subject matter knowledge, it has also been shown
to enhance a students grade point average and
aspirations for advanced degrees. It is also
associated with increased time devoted to
homework and studying and increased contact with
faculty.
12Student Behaviors
- Academic Effort and Involvement
- Non-classroom interactions with peers and faculty
that extend and reinforce what is happening in
ones academic experience appear to have the most
consistent positive impact. - A students level of academic effort and
involvement has an important net influence on
growth in general cognitive skills and
intellectual development. The level of individual
effort or engagement in areas such as hours
studied per week, the number of non-assigned
books read, writing experience, library use, and
course learning activities appear to have a
unique positive impact on standard measures of
critical thinking as well as on self reported
gains in critical thinking and intellectual
development.
13Student Behaviors
- Co-curricular Activities and Involvement
- The nature of students social and cocurricular
involvement has a unique impact on learning - in
addition to more formal classroom instruction.
Co-curricular involvement is also positively
related to persistence. - Co-curricular activities such as involvement in
clubs and organizations may foster critical
thinking. - Participation in intercollegiate athletics,
particularly mens revenue producing sports,
appears to have an inhibiting impact on the
development of critical thinking skills as well
the acquisition of subject matter knowledge. - Greek affiliation has a negative impact on
subject matter knowledge and cognitive
development during the first year. However, the
negative effect diminishes in future years. - On or off campus work during college,
particularly part time, has a trivial influence
on student learning and cognitive development. - There is no consistent evidence to suggest that
living off campus and commuting directly inhibits
acquisition of subject matter knowledge or
cognitive development. However, living on campus
appears to exert an indirect positive influence
on learning by enhancing academic and social
engagement. Students who live on campus are more
likely to persist and graduate than students that
commute as living in a residence hall facilitates
students social and academic involvement with
other students, with faculty members, and with
their institution.
14Student Behaviors
- Differences in Engagement among Student Groups
- First generation students tend to be less engaged
than other students, perhaps in part because they
have less tacit knowledge of and fewer
experiences with college campuses and related
activities, behaviors, and roles models (Kuh et
al. 2007). - NSSE results demonstrate that transfer students
share many characteristics with both older
students and commuters, but differ in marked ways
from students who start and graduate from the
same college (Kuh et al. 2007). - Interact less with faculty
- Participate in fewer educationally enriching
activities - Did more active and collaborative learning
- Viewed the campus as less supportive
- Were less satisfied overall with college
- Academic-social engagement in college may have
stronger positive effects on general cognitive
development for student with relatively low
tested academic ability than for their
counterparts with relatively higher academic
ability. Further, grades of lower ability
students are positively affected by engagement in
educationally effective activities to a greater
degree as compared with higher ability students.
15Institutional Conditions
- Faculty-Student Interaction
- Replicated evidence that suggests that student
critical thinking, analytical competencies, and
general intellectual development are enhanced by
an institutional environment that stresses close
relationship and frequent interaction between
faculty and students and faculty concern about
student growth and development. - Several studies suggest that students perception
of faculty members availability and interest in
them may be enough to promote persistence. - The relationship between faculty and students
appear to facilitate two processes. One is the
socialization of students to the normative values
and attitudes of the academy. The other is the
development and strengthening of the bond between
student and institution.
16Institutional Conditions
- Academic Programs and Services
- Academic programs and experiences that actively
engage students and foster academic and social
integration are positively linked to student
learning first year seminars, effective
academic advising, peer mentoring , advising and
counseling, summer bridge programs, learning
communities, living-learning centers, and
undergraduate research programs. - Studies uniformly demonstrate that first year
seminars, effective academic advising, and
comprehensive support and retention programs
(e.g., the TRIO programs) have positive effects
on student persistence and graduation. - The combination of faculty-student contact and
active learning within undergraduate research
programs appears to be particularly potent in
increasing persistence and degree completion
rates.
17Institutional Conditions
- Classroom Learning Environments
- Environments that stress high standards and
expectations for student performance are linked
to increased student learning. - Pedagogical approaches that appear to improve
subject matter learning over traditional
approaches include learning for mastery,
computer assisted instruction, active learning,
collaborative learning, cooperative learning, and
small group learning. - Problem-based learning and learning communities
appear to foster improved subject matter learning
and the development of general cognitive skills
such as critical thinking. - Certain teaching behaviors have a positive effect
on the acquisition of subject matter knowledge
e.g., teacher preparation-organization, quality
and frequency of feedback, teacher availability.
Moreover, teacher preparation and organization
also appear to have positive impacts on more
general measures of learning not tied to specific
courses - Little consistent evidence to suggest that a
students major field of study in and of itself
leads to different effects on general measures of
critical thinking. - Intellectual training in different fields of
study leads to the development of different
reasoning skills. - Evidence to suggest that coursework in natural
science courses may positively influence growth
in critical thinking skills. - Learning a computer programming language provides
advantages in general cognitive skills such as
planning, reasoning, and metacognition. - Coursework requiring students to learn to use
computers to analyze data, make visual displays,
and search the internet for course material also
contributes to greater growth in general
cognitive skills. - Critical thinking is enhanced by curricular
experiences that require the integration of ideas
and themes across courses and disciplines.
Interdisciplinary or core curriculum that
emphasize making explicit connections across
courses and among ideas and disciplines
positively influence students ability to solve
ill-structured problems.
18Institutional Conditions
- Institutional Structures and Environments
- Institutional structure is less important to
positive educational outcomes than the kinds of
peer groups and faculty environments that emerge
across different types of institutions. For
example, the underlying importance of peer groups
is that students in similar circumstances and
with common needs and interests have been
afforded an opportunity to interact and learn
together (Astin 1992, p. 415). Such peer groups
may happen more naturally at a liberal arts
residential campus, while other types of campuses
may have to be more deliberate in creating such
opportunities and environments. - Institutional resources and reputation (e.g., as
reported in U.S. News) are largely irrelevant to
high quality educational experiences as measured
by student engagement in educationally enriching
activities (Kuh et al. 2007). - College quality has less important implications
for intellectual and personal growth during
college than for career and socioeconomic
achievement. Net of confounding influences (pre
college abilities or cognitive level) attending
an academically selective institution has a
negligible effect on knowledge acquisition or
general cognitive development (Pascarella
Terenzini 2005). - Studies consistently indicate that students
attending private institutions have an advantage
over their counterparts at public colleges in
terms of persistence and degree completion.
Although with controls in place for precollege
characteristics, the private institution
advantage is muted or disappears. The effects of
attending a private college are likely indirect
and influenced by other institutional traits such
as size, selectivity, emphasis on undergraduate
education, and faculty and peer relations.
19- Learning Outcomes
- Reports of Learning Outcomes will be based on
administration of one of three VSA approved
instruments - College Learning Assessment (CLA)
- Motivational Appraisal of Personal Potential
(MAPP) - Collegiate Assessment of Academic Proficiency
(CAAP) - The same instrument must be administered to
students during their first semester of
attendance and also during their last semester of
attendance.
20Learning Outcomes
- Analysis will be cross-sectional and the results
will be displayed as gain scores (senior scores
freshman scores).
All of the Test Providers have committed to
providing the data in the same above fashion.
This is a made-up CLA example. The National
Comparison comment is based on distance from
expected score for the institution. A result of
/- 1 standard error is reported As Expected.
21Next Steps
- UW Oshkosh Timeline for Achieving VSA Early
Adopter Status - September and October 2007
- Presentations to all governance groups
- Campus-wide Open forums
- November 1, 2007
- UW Oshkosh makes decision about becoming an
- Early Adopter of VSA
Proposed VSA Rollout Schedule