Title: Because learning doesnt just happen in class'
1Because learning doesnt just happen in class.
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3The MJC SLO Training Program
- A No-nonsense look at Student Learning Outcomes
- How to Write a (measurable) Student Learning
Objective - Choosing the Best Assessment Tool
- Evaluating and Responding to Outcomes
- Documenting Your Efforts
4About Todays Workshop
5The MJC SLO Training Program
- A No-nonsense Look at Student Learning Outcomes
- How to Write a (Measurable) Student Learning
Objective - Choosing the Best Assessment Tool
- Evaluating and Responding to Outcomes
- Documenting Your Efforts
6Who can benefit.
- Students
- Faculty
- Staff
- Administrators
- Community Members
- Advisory Committees
- Board Members
7Why are we here?
- Weve heard the buzz, but we dont know what SLOs
are - We dont know how what we do relates to SLOs
- We want to make sure the work we do matters to
students - We want to make smart decisions about how to
improve our services - We want to know how individual roles at the
college are directly linked to student learning - We care about our students and want them to be
successful
8SESSION 1
A No-Nonsense look at
A No-Nonsense look at
SLOs
SLOs
9Shifting the Educational Paradigm
- From providing service creating success.
- From what is taught to what is learned.
10Times are changing.
- New insights into learning
- Unforeseen access to knowledge
- Changing student demographics
- Educational marketplace
- Changing global economy
- Feedback-driven global culture
- Requests for accountability
11What students need to survive.
- Initiative
- Independence
- Self-reliance
- Self-motivation
- Adequate preparation
- Transferable skills and knowledge
12Student Services
- At the heart of teaching essential life skills
13Some essential life skills and attitudes
- Self-respect
- Motivation
- Independent navigation of systems and processes
- Information seeking
- Teamwork
- Identifying and using resources
- Goal-oriented behaviors
14Learning life skills at MJC
- Registering for classes
- Seeking health care
- Starting and organizing a club
- Filing a complaint
- Finding a classroom location
- Completing and committing to an educational plan
- Meeting with a counselor
15How do we improve those skills and attitudes?
- Acknowledge that producing student learning and
success is our primary purpose as an educational
institution. - Communicate the learning-centered purpose of our
student services to our students and the public. - Participate in an institutional culture that
fosters the ongoing, thoughtful, and systematic
evaluation of student learning in response to our
services. - Conscientiously link and organize our activities
to support student learning and success by
becoming learning-centered.
16Accreditation and Learning-Centered Institutions
17What is Accreditation?
- A voluntary and cyclical peer-review process in
which we participate for the purpose of gaining
valuable feedback about our institutional health
and how well our students are prepared for their
short and long term goals as a result of walking
through our institution.
18Understanding Accreditation
- Nationwide, six regional accrediting
associations. - Each regional association has specific
commissions for different segments K-12,
Community Colleges, and Universities. - Each regional commission establishes standards
against which all institutions are evaluated and
determined to be worthy of accreditation. - Each association learns from the other
- MJC is part of WASC, Western Association of
Schools and Colleges, the Accrediting Commission
for Community and Junior Colleges.
19What does it mean to be accredited?
- Nationally recognized value of our courses for
students - State and federal funding for the college
- Financial aid for our students
- Participation in a collegial peer-review process
- Permission to self-govern and self-improve
- Academic freedom to foster an organic exchange of
ideas - Formal endorsement of our accomplishments
- Public trust in our institution
20How do we get to be accredited?
- We evaluate ourselves against the posted
accreditation standards every six years. - We write a self-study reporting what we have
learned - WASC selects our colleagues from other
institutions to form our Visiting Team - The team reads and evaluates our self-study
- They visit us and evaluate us on site
21How do we get to be accredited?
- 6) The team compares our self-study to its own
evaluations while on site. - 7) It determines whether we meet or exceed the
standards. - 8) It makes recommendations or commendations.
- 9) It renews or removes our accredited status.
- 10) The team expects us to act upon those
recommendations during the subsequent
accreditation period.
22About Our Accreditation
- In January 2006, MJCs accredited status was
renewed for 6 years by WASC, with a customary
mid-term report due in 2008. An additional
progress report will be due in October 2007 that
states how well we are on course in responding to
its recent recommendations.
23The Link to SLOs
24What does SLO stand for?
- Student learning objective
- Student learning outcome
- An acronym used throughout the revised WASC
accreditation standards in 2002.
25What does accreditation have to do with SLOs?
- WASC is the last of the agencies to incorporate
national trends toward learning-centered
education, principles, and processes. - WASC has revised the standards to ensure that
institutions put student learning first - WASC knows that we will be on that path when we
use Student Learning Outcomes college-wide to
directly respond to learning.
26SLOs and MJC
- From our accreditation visit
- Federal legislation affecting accreditors
requires that accredited colleges conduct
systematic assessments of educational outcomes. - Translation
- Were way behind the 8-ball!
27How do we know this?
- Observations as to how well MJC used assessment
of student learning outcomes was the theme of
the site visit report. - WASC recommendations to MJC included a need to
see student learning outcomes used at the
institution, program/award, course, and student
service levels. - WASC observed that evidence (SLOs) is not used
systematically across the college to identify
student needs and assess progress.
28Reading between the lines
- the challenge Americas community colleges face
with the new millennium is a need to transform
themselves into colleges that place learning
first in every decision and action.
William J. Flynn, Palomar CollegeThe Search for
the Learning-Centered College
29What does this mean?
- Student learning outcomes are the collective
responsibility of the MJC community.
- Instructional and non-instructional faculty
- Student Services Personnel
- Support Staff
- Facilities personnel
- Instructional administrators
- Student services administrators
- District Personnel
- Community Members
- Board Members
- Advisory panels
- Students
30Measuring Learning
31What is a Student Learning Outcome?
- The fixed, observable, and measurable result
after one or more events of teaching and
learning, and/or interactions.
32Examples of Student Learning Outcomes
- 36 of new students receiving orientations in
Spring of 2006 report they had no difficulty
using the printed schedule of classes to schedule
and locate classes and college resources.
(FICTITIOUS OUTCOME)
33Examples of Student Learning Outcomes
- 55 of new students who completed the FAFSA
correctly between January 1 and March 31 of 2006,
were given some form of financial aid.
(FICTITIOUS OUTCOME)
34Examples of Student Learning Outcomes
- 1 out of every 4 students who initially visit an
MJC counselor return to complete an educational
plan. 2 out of 4 of all students who prepare an
educational plan eventually earn an associate
degree.
(FICTITIOUS OUTCOME)
35Examples of Student Learning Outcomes
- 36 of students enrolled in MATH 90 sections who
successfully completed MATH 70 in spring 2005
went on to successfully complete MATH 90 in Fall
2005.
(FICTITIOUS OUTCOME)
36Questioning an Outcome
37Outcomes produce questions
- FIRST QUESTION Why were only 20 of new students
able to complete the registration process using
PiratesNet?
(why does it look like this?)
38Second, third, fourth
- How many students have access to an
Internet-accessible computer? - How many students used Telephone Registration?
- Were there any IT failures or issues during
registration? - How many students completed the matriculation
process?
39By questioning, we gain insight.
- Investigate how we can increase the number of
phone lines during peak periods - Increase IT resources during peak
registration/server traffic periods. - Make registration and institutional priority
- Increase on-line registration training of entire
college staff (and faculty.) - Additional student emails with on-line
registration instructions
40Did you notice?
Outcomes cannot be linked solely to one
influencing factor.
41- Ultimately, outcomes only provide strong evidence
as to whether certain factors working together
produce or increase learning.
42Those factors can include
- Curriculum design
- Course activities
- Student support services
- Learning resources
- Teaching methods
- Instructional modality
- Scheduling
- Budgetary provisions
- Facilities
- Student demographics
- Learning styles
- External influences
43Every outcome can give feedback about those
factors.
- Curriculum design
- Course activities
- Student support services
- Learning resources
- Teaching methods
- Instructional modality
- Scheduling
- Budgetary provisions
- Facilities
- Student demographics
- Learning styles
- External influences
44One outcome is an intriguing glimpse at an
institutions effectiveness at a given point in
time.
45We are ALL part of each and every outcome!
46Outcomes are very complex.
- Multiple factors influence an outcome
- Factors can be internal and/or external
- Some factors we influence directly
- Some factors we influence indirectly
- Outcomes require thoughtful analysis and inquiry
- Outcomes invite questions
- Outcomes inspire solutions
- Outcomes require integrated, ongoing dialog
- Outcomes are MJCs responsibility
47Overview of Outcomes
- Not permanently fixed, nor permanently
unchangeable - Not usually predictable
- Not something we write
- Linked to many influencing factors
- Intriguing glimpse at MJCs effectiveness at a
given point and time - Generate questions and stimulate responses about
how and how well learning occurs
48Responding to Outcomes
49Inquiring about outcomes
- Research and practice is showing that- by
engaging in a systematic and ongoing
investigation into the causes of learning
outcomes- student learning and success can be
improved by those closes to the students
faculty, staff, and administrators.
50TLC Learning-Centered,Educator-Guided Cycle for
the Improvement of Teaching and Learning
51What is the TLC?
- The Teaching and Learning Cycle is an iterative
process through which educators choose one or
more events of student learning or activity to
systematically investigate and gain insight about
what has contributed to, detracted from, or not
affected learning and success.
Any person whos role contributes to student
success, either directly or indirectly
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53We can all use the TLC to learn about student
learning and success.
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55Flexibility of the Cycle
- The TLC should be employed in all areas of the
college, at every level,and across all
functions to evaluate how a student interacts
with and benefits from our institution, as its
sole purpose is to help us evaluate our
effectiveness from a students experiential
perspective.
56Strengths of the Cycle
- Regulates steps that we already use in our
teaching and service practices to improve student
success. - Allows us to fairly and objectively evaluate how
learning happens in our courses, programs, and
institutional activities. - Becomes more valuable with each revolution.
- Keeps us from wasting time exploring ineffective
means of improvement - Allows us to systematically, not only
intuitively, review the process of teaching and
learning and providing services to make
meaningful decisions to improve student success.
57The cycle begins from a fixed reference point
that lasts for the duration of one or more
cycles.
58Where the Cycle Begins
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60A Student Learning
- Objective is an explicit statement that clearly
identifies the desired observable and measurable
knowledge, skills, attitudes, and or behaviors
that must be shown to demonstrate has taken place
in a given context.
61What does an objective do?
- Informs the student what knowledge, skill,
behavior, or attitude should occur in a given
activity, assuming a satisfactory experience. - Inspires active student involvement by
encouraging them to be accountable and letting
them measure their progress in comparison to the
goal. - Communicates our expectations explicitly and
concisely so that all audiences are aware of the
learning targeted in a given context. - Establishes a goal to which we correlate specific
teaching, learning, and/or service activities. - Acts as a baseline against which we measure and
compare outcomes in lessons, courses, programs,
services, and the institution overall.
62A Student Learning
- Objective is an explicit statement that clearly
identifies the desired observable and measurable
knowledge, skills, attitudes, and or behaviors
that must be shown to demonstrate has taken place
in a given context.
Outcome is the fixed, measured result of one or
more events of teaching and learning, and/or
service in a given context.
63Student Learning Objectives (What you want.)
Student Learning Outcomes (What you get)
64Outcomes happen.
65Outcomes are not the point.
Its what we do in response to them that counts.
66STUDENT LEARNING OUTCOMES
Objectives
Response
Just one of many tools that advances us from
providing instruction and service to facilitating
learning and success.
Dialog
Inquiry
Collaboration
Assessment
Evaluation
67Thanks to the 2005-2006MJC SLO Committee
- Adrienne Peek, English
- Anne Shanto, Theatre
- Becky Plaza, Outreach
- Charles Mullins, Speech Communication
- Ed Howard, English
- Gerald Wray, Autobody
- Kathleen Silva, Research and Planning
- Lee Merchant, Psychology
Letitia Senechal, SLO Facilitator Melissa Beach,
Instructional Services Michele Monlux,
Science Mike Morales, Agriculture Noel Langley,
Admissions and Records Penny Belus, Magic
Lab Shelley Circle, English
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