Title: The CAS Basics A Training in the Assessment Process
1The CAS BasicsA Training in the Assessment
Process
- For Messiah Collegeby
- Christina Anastasi
- 5/22/07
2Introductions
- Name
- Program Representing
- Personal Learning Objectives
3What is Assessment?
- Your Ideas?
- Systematic collection and interpretation of data
- Locally designed and executed
4Upcraft SchuhAssessment in Student Affairs
(1996)
- Assessment Any effort, analyze, and interpret
evidence which describes institutional,
departmental, divisional, or agency effectiveness - Evaluation Any effort to use assessment
evidence to improve institutional, departmental,
divisional, or agency effectiveness
5Why Do Assessments?
- Your Ideas?
- Preparation for Accreditation
- Licensure Certification
- Program Review
- Measures of program service effectiveness
- Institutional self-studies
- Design of new programs services
- Staff development
- Academic preparation
- Credibility and accountability
6Why Do Assessments?
- To improve education and student learning
- To examine congruence with institution's stated
purpose - Performance funding
- To address concerns of effectiveness (access,
cost, and decline in student learning) - Ethical practice
- Curiosity
7Advantages of Self-Assessment
- Internally Driven
- Supports Staff Development
- You are in the Best Position to Evaluate Your
Programs and Services - Recognition and Rewards are Made Locally
- Develops a Shared Vision Among Various
Constituents
8History of CAS
- Founded in 1979 in response to efforts to improve
program standards for universities offering a
masters degree in student affairs administration - Council for the Advancement of Standards for
Student Services / Development Programs - Initially a Study Group of ACPA NASPA
- First standards published in 1986 American
College Testing (ACT) Grant - 1992 Council for the Advancement of Standards
in Higher Education
9CAS MissionLet us raise a standard to which the
wise and honest can repair.George Washington,
1787
- Establish, adopt, and disseminate unified and
timely professional standards to guide student
learning and development programs and services - Promote assessment and improvement of higher
education programs and services through
self-study, evaluation, and the use of CAS
Standards - Promote encourage a focus on quality assurance
- Promote inter-association efforts to address
these issues
10CAS Principles- Students and Their Institutions-
- Student is considered as a unique, whole person
- Institutional environments shape learning
- Responsibility for learning rests with the
student - Institutions provide opportunities for learning
- Institutions reflect society and its diversity
11CAS Principles- Diversity and Multiculturalism -
- Institutions embrace diversity and eliminate
barriers that impede student learning - Justice and respect for differences
bondindividuals to community
12CAS Principles- Organization, Leadership, and
Human Resources -
- Leadership is essential for institutionalsuccess
- Institutional success is related to clarity
ofmission - Qualifications of staff members is tieddirectly
to quality of educational programsand services - Leaders possess sound educationalpreparation and
experience
13CAS Principles- Health Engendering Environments
-
- Educational programs and services prosper in
benevolent environments that provide students
with appropriate levels of challenge and support.
14CAS Principles- Ethical Considerations -
- Educational service providers provideimpeccable
ethical behavior in theirprofessional and
personal lives.
15CAS Purpose- Philosophy Beliefs -
- Excellence in Higher Education
- Collaboration Between Teacher Learner
- Ethics in Educational Practice
- Student Development As a Major Goal of Higher
Education - Student Responsibility for Learning
16Who is CAS?
- A consortium of 36 professional organizations
comprising a constituency of over 100,000 - Joins Academic Affairs, Student Affairs, and
Service Units into One Council - 2004 was its 25th Anniversary
- Member associations send representatives to the
CAS Board of Directors - Consensus-oriented, collaborative
17Who is CAS?- Member Associations -
- Associations from both U.S. Canada
- See List from www.cas.edu
18Who is CAS?- Executive Committee -
- Executive Director Phyllis Mable Council for
the Advancement of Standards in Higher Education - President Jan ArminioAssociate Professor and
Chair, Department of Counseling and College
Student Personnel Shippensburg University - Secretary Douglas Lange Association of
Fraternity Advisors - Treasurer Carmen Guevara Neuberger Public
Director - Officer-at-Large Laura DeanVice President
Dean of Student DevelopmentPeace College - Officer-at-Large Paula SwinfordDirector, Health
Promotion and Prevention ServicesUniversity of
Southern California - Officer-at-Large Susan KomivesAssociate
Professor, Counseling Personnel Services
University of Maryland - College Park
19Who is CAS?- Board of Directors -
- 2 Representatives from Each Member Association
(Director / Alternate Director) - 1 Representative Attends Meetings
- Directory
- Meetings
20CAS Resources
- 35 functional area standards (pub. in 6th
edition, 2006) - Reviewed and revised regularly
- General standards contained within every other
set of standards - Masters level student affairs administration
preparation program standards - Contextual statements for each area
- Self-Assessment Guides (with instructions
training) - Frameworks for Assessing Learning Development
Outcomes (FALDOs) - CAS Statement of Shared Ethical Principles
- CAS Characteristics of Individual Excellence
21CAS Standards
-
- Academic AdvisingAdmission ProgramsAlcohol,
Tobacco, and Other Drug ProgramCampus
ActivitiesCampus Information and Visitor
ServicesCampus Religious and/or Spiritual
ProgramsCareer ServicesClinical Health
ServicesCollege Honor SocietiesCollege
UnionCommuter and Off-Campus Living
ProgramsConference and Event ProgramsCounseling
ServicesDisability Support ServicesDistance
Education ProgramsEducation Abroad Programs and
ServicesFinancial Aid ProgramsFraternity and
Sorority AdvisingHealth Promotion
ServicesHousing and Residential Life
ProgramsInternational Student Programs and
ServicesInternship ProgramsLearning Assistance
ProgramsLesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender
Programs and ServicesMasters-Level Graduate
Program for Student Affairs ProfessionalsMulticul
tural Student Programs and ServicesOrientation
ProgramsOutcome Assessment and Program
EvaluationRecreational Sports ProgramsRegistrar
Programs and ServicesService-Learning
ProgramsStudent Conduct ProgramsStudent
Leadership ProgramsTRIO and Other Educational
Opportunity ProgramsWomen Student Programs and
Services
22CAS Standards Format 13 Component Parts
- 1. Mission
- 2. Program
- 3. Leadership
- 4. Organization management
- 5. Human resources
- 6. Financial resources
- 7. Facilities, technology, equipment
- 8. Legal responsibilities
- 9. Equity and access
- 10. Campus and community relations
- 11. Diversity
- 12. Ethics
- 13. Assessment evaluation
23Program Learning and Development Outcome Domains
- Intellectual growth
- Effective communication
- Enhanced self-esteem
- Realistic self-appraisal
- Clarified values
- Career choices
- Leadership development
- Healthy behavior
- Meaningful interpersonal relationships
-
- Independence
- Collaboration
- Social responsibility
- Satisfying and productive lifestyles
- Appreciating diversity
- Spiritual awareness
- Personal and educational goals
24Understanding CAS Standards
- CAS standards . . .
- Represent indispensable requirements of
practice - Are achievable by any and all programs of
quality - Appear in bold print
- Use auxiliary verbs must shall
25Understanding CAS Guidelines
- CAS guidelines . . .
- Clarify amplify standards
- Guide enhanced practice beyond essential
functions - Appear in light-faced type
- Use verbs should may
26Standard Guideline Example
STANDARD BOLD TYPE AUXILIARY VERBS MUST
SHALL Counseling services must be a) intentional,
b) coherent, c) based on theories and knowledge
of counseling, learning, and human development,
d) reflective of developmental and demographic
profiles of the student population, and e)
responsive to the needs of individuals within a
higher education setting. GUIDELINE LIGHT-
FACED TYPE AUXILIARY VERBS SHOULD
MAY Counseling services should provide
consultation, supervision, and in-service
professional development for faculty members,
administrators, staff and student staff members,
and paraprofessionals.
27The CAS SAG A Self-Assessment Guide
- Translates CAS standards into an effective
workbook format - Promotes program self-assessment and development
- Informs on program strengths and weaknesses
- Supports professional staff development
- Leads to enhanced student learning and
development
28Frameworks for Assessing Learning and Development
Outcomes
- FALDOs companion to standards book
- Provide Clarity on Learning Domains
- Guide Assessment Activities with Questions
Instruments - Chapters for each learning outcome domain with a
theoretical description of the domain (e. g.,
leadership development, social responsibility,
career choices), assessment examples, list of
possible instruments, and additional resources - Published as Book CD set
29CAS Approach to Self-Regulation and
Self-Assessment
- Fundamental Elements
- 1. Quality best determined by institution's
people2. Goals based on shared vision3.
Nationally agreed-upon quality indicators4.
Reliance on honesty with meticulous evaluation5.
Assembling of results into a plan for improvement
30Ground Rules for Quality Self-Assessment
- A commitment by the management team to improve
the program or service - Mutual trust among the members (confidentiality)
- Decisions would always be made that are in the
best interest of the college or university - All team members have something of value to say
and can contribute to the decisions of the group - Programs or services should be recognized and
rewarded if they are exceptional in surpassing
the standards and guidelines
31Comprehensive Assessment Model- Upcraft Schuh
(1996) -
- Use of Services, Programs, Facilities
- Student Needs
- Student Satisfaction
- Campus Environments
- Student Cultures
- Program Service Outcomes
- Benchmarking Comparing Performance Across
Organizations - Measuring Effectiveness Against Professional
Standards
32Good Assessments
- Provide useful information
- Provide reasonably accurate information
- Protect privacy of students
- Are systematic and regular
- Are effective in terms of time, cost, and other
resources
33CAS Self-Assessment Process
- 1) Establish and Prepare Self-assessment Team
- 2) Understand the CAS Standards Guidelines
- 3) Compile and Review the Evidence
- - Gathering Evidence (Quantitative
Qualitative) - - Conduct Rating
- - Gather Consensus
- - Identify and Summarize Evaluative Evidence
- 4) Judge Performance
- - Identify Strengths Discrepancies
- 5) Write the Action Plan
- - Determine Appropriate Corrective Action
- - Recommend Steps for Program Enhancement
- - Prepare an Action Plan
34 1 - Establish Prepare Self-Assessment Team
- Division-wide requires 8-10 members
- Single functional area calls for 3-5
- Include members from the outside
- Establish team ground rules
- Establish teams inter-rater reliability
- Encourage team discussion and expect team members
to disagree
351 - Establish Prepare Self-Assessment
Team(Team Actions to Conduct the Assessment
Process)
- Decide whether to include guidelines or other
measures that go beyond the standards - Gather and analyze relevant quantitative and
qualitative data - Individuals rate each and every criterion measure
- Obtain additional documentary evidence if
required to make an informed team decision - Complete the assessment, ratings, action plan
worksheets
36 1 - Establish Prepare Self-Assessment
Team(Using Guidelines as Standards)
- Write criterion statements and add these to the
teams scoring scheme. - Exclude criterion measures deemed not
applicable to the program only on the very rare
occasion when an extenuating circumstance exists
(e.g., an institution that is not allowed by
state law to follow affirmative action
procedures.)
373 Compile Review the Evidence
K E Y T O A S S E S S M E N T The
self-assessment is not complete until relevant
data and related documentation are in place to
support the raters
judgments.
38Examples of Evaluative Evidence
- STUDENT RECRUITMENT MATERIALS
- Brochures other program information
- Participation policies procedures
- PROGRAM DOCUMENTS
- Mission statements program purpose philosophy
statements - Catalogs related materials
- Staff student manuals policies procedures
statements - ADMINISTRATIVE DOCUMENTS
- Organization charts student staff profiles
- Financial resource statements budgets
- Annual reports
- STAFF ACTIVITY REPORTS
- Curriculum vitae resumes professional activity
- Service to other programs, departments, or
community - STUDENT ACTIVITY REPORTS
- Portfolios, developmental transcripts, resumes
- Reports of student service
- RESEARCH EVALUATION DATA
- Needs assessments self-studies
39Quantitative Data
- Summaries of objective responses on a
questionnaire or program evaluation - Statistics about use by students and various
population subgroups - Needs assessments, follow-up studies, and
self-study reports - Institutional research reports and fact books
40Quantitative Data Examples
- Financial resource statements
- Assessment reports
- Research, assessment, and evaluation data staff
activity reports - Reports of scholarship or other professional
contributionsStudent activity reports - Employer reports
- Program evaluations
- Participant evaluations
- Needs assessment
- Follow-up studies
- Program evaluations
41Qualitative Data
- Focus group information
- Written summaries of responses to open-ended
questions in interviews and on evaluations - Client satisfaction surveys, self-reports, and
written comments, both solicited and unsolicited
42Qualitative Data Examples
-
- Student recruitment materials
- Brochures and other sources of information about
the programParticipation policies/proceduresPart
icipant evaluationsProgram documentsMission
statements Catalogs and related statementsStaff
and student manualsPolicies and procedure
statementsEvaluation and periodic
reportContractsStaff memosInstitutional
administrative documentsStatements about program
purpose and philosophy relative to other
educational programsOrganization chartsStudent
and staff profilesFollow-up studiesProgram
evaluationsPreviously published institutional
self-study reportsVitaeAnnual reports of
performanceService to other departmentsPortfolio
sDevelopmental transcriptsOther evidence of
student contributions to the institution,
community, or professionReports of special
student accomplishments exit interviewStudent
journalsStudent diariesStudent
papersObservations
43 3 Compile Review the Evidence (cont.)
- SAGs offer a ready format for evaluation
- In most instances, there are multiple criterion
statements for each standard - Each criterion measure focuses on a particular
aspect of the standard, allowing raters to
express more detailed and specific judgments
44Criterion Measure Rating Scale
- ND 1 2 3 4 NR
- Not Done Not met Minimally Well
Fully Not Rated - Met Met Met
ND 1 2 3 4 NR Not Done Not met
Minimally Well Fully Not
Rated Met Met Met
- Using this scale, consider each criterion
statement and decide - The extent to which each criterion measure has
been met by the program or service
45Assessment Criteria Example
- Part 6 FINANCIAL RESOURCES
- Counseling Services (CS) must have adequate
funding to accomplish its mission and goals.
Funding priorities must be determined within the
context of the stated mission, goals, objectives,
and comprehensive analysis of the needs and
capabilities of students and the availability of
internal or external resources. - CS must demonstrate fiscal responsibility and
cost effectiveness consistent with institutional
protocols. - ND 1 2 3
4 NR - Not Done Not Met Minimally Met Well
Met Fully Met Not Rated - PART 6. FINANCIAL RESOURCES (Criterion
Measures) Rating Scale NOTES - 6.1 The program has adequate funding to
accomplish its mission and goals. ND 1 2 3
4 NR - 6.2 Funding priorities are determined within
the context of program mission, - student needs, and available fiscal
resources. ND 1 2 3 4 NR - 6.3 The program demonstrates fiscal
responsibility and cost effectiveness - consistent with institutional protocols. ND
1 2 3 4 NR - Part 6 Financial Resources Overview Questions
46 4 Judge Performance
- For each of the 13 Parts, identify the criterion
measure item number(s) for which there is
substantial rating discrepancy. - Items not circled should reflect consensus among
raters that practice in that area is
satisfactory. - Items where judgment variance occurs need to be
discussed thoroughly by team members. - Follow this action by determining which practices
can be designated as excellent or
unsatisfactory. - List the items requiring follow-up action,
including any criterion measure rated as
unsatisfactory by any reviewer. - Complete the Overview Questions at the end of
each Part.
474 Judge Performance 5 Write the Action
Plan
- Work Form A Assessment, Ratings, and
Significant Items - Work Form B Follow-Up Actions
- Work Form C Summary Action Plan
48 Action Plans
- Actions required for the program to meet all
standards - Areas that need follow-up because they are less
than satisfactory - Resources that would be necessary for program
enhancements - Dates for completion
- Staff member responsible for completing work
49Timeline
- It is Time Consuming
- Requires about 4 5 Months to Complete
- Up to a Year
- Dont Rush It
- Better Student Learning is the Goal
50QUIZ
- The CAS Knowledge Game
- (SAG CD-ROM)
51Assessment Tips
- Add learning outcomes to program evaluations
- Add assessment expectations to position
descriptions - Ask questions about assessment experience when
interviewing new staff
52Tips (contd)
- Give reading assignments when training and offer
pre-tests and post-tests - Quick, lean, and over the phone or in combination
with on-line surveys - If using qualitative methodologies, be sure you
are knowledgeable and trained
53Tips (contd)
- Consider longitudinal studies
- Do not be afraid to communicate results and when
you do offer executive summaries and access to
the full report - Consider electronic portfolios and automated data
collectors - Compare against national data
54Tips (contd)
- Search for students who could serve as
inexpensive consultants - Have access to SPSS windows
- Systematize the process, for example include
survey to a mailing you already distribute
55Tips (contd)
- Do not confuse assessments with personnel
evaluations, however, include willingness to
assess - Do not engage in assessment if you are not
willing to adapt to what the data indicates
56Roadblocks to Assessment
- Discussion
- Proactive Reactive Solutions
57Resources
- www.cas.edu
- SAG CD PowerPoint Presentation E-Learning
Course - Christina Anastasi
- canastasi_at_netscape.net
- (717) 579-6258