Title: GE ASSESSMENT, 20062007: Critical Thinking in GE
1GE ASSESSMENT, 2006-2007Critical Thinking in GE
- Process, Results, Recommendations
- GE Critical Thinking Task Force
- http//www.csuchico.edu/vpaa/ued/GE_CT_Program20A
ssessment_v2.pdf
2GE ASSESSMENT Rationale, Structure and Process
- Need for Program assessment
- Mandate for Program assessment
- (EO-595, EM-99-05, MOU)
- Existing structures GEAC, AURA, disciplinary
specialists - Goals of GE Program assessment
- Participatory
- Outcomes based
- Unobtrusive (limited impact on workload, budget,
etc) - Meaningful, Manageable, Sustainable
3GE Program Assessment
- GE Goals (EM 99-05)
- improve reading, writing, critical thinking,
discussion and speaking skills, mathematical
reasoning, analysis and problem solving - GE Program Outcomes
- communicate thoughtfully and clearly, both
orally and in writing - think critically and constructively
- be conversant and skilled in the basic
undergraduate understanding of mathematics - Other Goals, Outcomes focused on science,
literature, the arts, humanities, behavioral and
social sciences integrative and
interdisciplinary understandings, etc - GE Program Assessment to date has focused on Core
Skills Writing, Oral Communications,
Quantitative Reasoning in AY 05-06, Critical
Thinking in AY 06-07
4Goals of Assessing Critical Thinking (CT) in GE
- Progress towards an acceptable definition of CT
appropriate to our campus and GE - Progress towards a means of assessing student
competence in CT using methods - Acceptable to faculty
- Generate useful, actionable data
- Based on embedded assessment of authentic student
work across GE (not solely Area A-3) - Sound, defensible results
5Process For Assessing CT in GE
- Form Task Force with membership from AURA, GEAC,
Provosts Office and disciplinary specialists
(Philosophy) - Margaret Owens, Assoc Dean CNS, AURA
- Gwen Sheldon, Sociology, GEAC
- Brooke Moore and Greg Tropea, Philosophy
- Bill Loker, Dean of Undergraduate Education
6Process For Assessing CT in GE (contd)
- Task Force wrestled with definitions of CT
- Simultaneously, recruited faculty for
participation in CT assessment - Instructors of GE Courses
- Assignments that elicit CT in students
- Shared CT definition with faculty
- Created shared rubric for assessing CT
7CT Definitional Issues
- Many definitions of CT in the literature
- CT a generalized skill or context specific?
- Task Force guided by EO-595, EM 99-05 which
circumscribe CT in GE - Focused on understanding and analysis of argument
or problem in a text - Recognize not appropriate for all GE courses or
intellectual traditions - E.g. literary criticism, creative writing
- Two dimensions identified reasoning and
comprehension
8Comprehension In texts and other forms of
discourse, students SLO 1. Can identify
issues Does the text address an issue or
problem? If so, what is it? SLO 2. Can
distinguish between clarification, argument,
persuasion and other ways of relating to an
issue How does the text address the issue or
problem? Does it merely raise it? Does it seek to
clarify it? Does it take a position on it? Does
it attempt to persuade an audience of that
position? Does it support or defend the position?
Does it relate to the issue in another
manner? SLO 3. Can recognize the difference
between conclusions and the arguments for them If
a conclusion has been reached, what is it? What
arguments have been given for that conclusion?
SLO 4. Can distinguish between factual
judgments and non-factual judgments Is the issue
a question of objective fact? Is it a normative
questioni.e., a question calling for a value
judgment? Is it purely subjective?
9Reasoning In texts and other forms of discourse,
students SLO 5. Can distinguish between
inductive reasoning and deductive reasoning Do
given arguments support their conclusion
(induction) or do they demonstrate it
(deduction)? SLO 6. Can distinguish between
truth and logic Can students distinguish and
assess the truth of a statement from the quality
of the reasoning (i.e., logical structure) within
which that statement may function? Can they, for
example, avoid the errors of thinking that
reasoning with one or more false statements
entails bad logic? Or that reasoning that
consists entirely of true statements entails good
logic? SLO 7. Can determine whether a
consideration is relevant Is the discussion
relevant to the issue? Has rhetoric been offered
in place of evidence? SLO 8. Can recognize
questionable assumptions and missing
information Have questionable assumptions been
made? Is important information missing? SLO 9.
Can evaluate the credibility of statements and
sources Are sources and claims both credible?
SLO 10. Can identify ambiguity, vagueness, and
common fallacies in reasoning Are key passages
vague, ambiguous, or otherwise unclear? Are there
mistakes in reasoning?
10CT Scoring Rubric Comprehension ( Reasoning,
next slide)
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12CT in GE Assessment Results
- 18 faculty teaching 21 courses volunteered to
participate in assessment of these we ended up
with 11 faculty and 8 courses where student work
was assessed - Courses from Areas A, B, C and D, Lower Division
Core, Breadth and Upper Division Themes (see next
slide) - 186 pieces of student work, each item
independently assessed by two readers for Overall
Comprehension and Reasoning on a scale of 1-3 (1
Poor, 3 Competent)
13Statistical Snapshot of CT Materials, Students
14Statistical Summary Comprehension and Reasoning
Scores, all students
15Mean Comprehension, Reasoning Scores, all students
16Mean Comprehension Scores Differ Significantly (t
1.89, p lt 0.05, one-tailed)
17Mean Reasoning Scores Differ Significantly (t
1.81, p lt 0.05, one-tailed)
18Results Other Statistical Analyses
- Weak, positive relationship between class level
and performance on both Reasoning and
Comprehension (gamma 0.16, P lt 0.05) - No relationship detected between gender, degree
sought, native vs. transfer status and CT scores
19Critical Thinking in GE On Balance
- Assuming the soundness of the methodology pursued
- Students gain in CT skills over time, e.g.
seniors vs. first- year students - Level of CT performance at all class levels less
than outstanding, e.g. as seniors only slightly
more than half of the students reached the
developing level (score of 2) on
Comprehension and Reasoning - Apparent lack of clear consensus as to what
constitutes CT among faculty and how to elicit CT
from students via assignments in GE courses
20GE Assessment Two Years On Writing, Oral
Communication, Quantitative Reasoning a brief
review of results
21GE Assessment Two Years on What have we
learned?
- Both Quantitative Reasoning (QR) and Critical
Thinking face definitional issues on campus
until we know what we want our students to know
and do, it will be difficult to assess these and
measure our success - Both CT and Writing are highly valued by faculty
but faculty need support in the pedagogy of
both Writing and CT so students can practice and
improve - Both QR and Oral Communication are
little-practiced in GE outside Areas A1, A4
faculty need to revisit GE documents that
encourage integration of all Core domains
across GE curriculum walk the walk or dont talk
the talk
22GE Assessment Two Years on What have we
learned? contd
- Student performance on all core domains verges on
the adequate with non-normed results of
non-standardized assessment, student performance
is impossible to compare across campuses and
difficult to gauge but clearly there is room
for improvement - Campus desperately needs an extended discussion
of our purposes and goals in GE, as well as
assessment strategies to substantiate and assure
the quality of the GE program - Are we ready?