Title: AbilityBased Education at Alverno College
1- Ability-Based Education at Alverno College
2Student Body
- UG Women
- G Women and Men
- 70 First Generation College including 32
Minority - Fall 2008 Enrollment 2654
- 96 received Financial Aid
- 32 Catholic, 19 other denominations
3Proposed Outcomes for Session
- to have a sense of each others educational
principles both unique and shared - to have enough of an initial understanding of
Alvernos educational program to have a
meaningful conversation about the design of a
competency based HS program in Michigan
4Three sets of key ideas
- Why people listen to Alverno College
- What are we doing that captures attention?
- Why people should listen to Alverno College
- Where does our practice fit with current
cognitive and social psychology? - Why people should apply what they hear when they
listen to Alverno College - What impact can we/are we having on critical
issues for education in the US and abroad?
5Why people listen to Alverno College
- Alverno is cited consistently as an example of
effectiveness in higher education because of - The eight abilities
- The assessment process
- The connections we make to contexts in which
students practice what theyre learning - Our use of the Diagnostic Digital Portfolio,
which captures faculty feedback and student self
assessment over time
6The New York TimesJanuary 1, 2000
- As students, professors, and politicians seek
clearer definitions of what a basic college
education should include and how to measure the
results, Alverno. . . offers a breathtakingly
simple approach to both. . . Deceptively simple,
but Alverno has won many awards and drawn a
stream of corporate and educational visitors from
as far away as Hong Kong and Abu Dhabi.
7PRINCIPLE
- Educators are RESPONSIBLE for making learning
more available - by ARTICULATING OUTCOMES
- and making them PUBLIC
8One of the Questions the President asked each
Department to Address
- What are you teaching that is so important that
students cannot afford to pass up courses in your
department?
Which led to questions like
- How do you want your students to be able to think
as a result of studying your discipline? - What do you want your students to be able to do
as a result of studying your discipline?
9- In 1973, new curriculum initiated based on eight
institutional abilities or outcomes
- Graduation requirements based on demonstration of
outcomes rather than distribution requirements.
10PRINCIPLE
Education GOES BEYOND knowing to being able
to DO WHAT ONE KNOWS
11EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
Writing
Speaking
12EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
Reading
Listening
13EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
Quantitative Literacy
Media Literacy
14EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION
Computer Literacy
15ANALYTICAL CAPABILITY
16PROBLEM SOLVING ABILITY
17VALUING IN DECISION MAKING CONTEXTS
18EFFECTIVE SOCIAL INTERACTION
19DEVELOPING A GLOBAL PERSPECTIVE
20EFFECTIVE CITIZENSHIP
21AESTHETIC ENGAGEMENT
22Abilities that
- Involve the whole person
- Are teachable
- Can be assessed
- Transfer across settings
- Are continually re-evaluated and
- re-defined
23PRINCIPLE
Abilities need to be defined in a way that our
teaching of them can be DEVELOPMENTAL
24 25Analysis
- Level 1 Show observational skills
- Level 2 Draw reasonable inferences
- Level 3 Perceive and make relationships
- Level 4 Analyze structure and organization
- Level 5 Employ frameworks from major and
support disciplines in order to analyze - Level 6 Independently employ frameworks
26PRINCIPLE
Designing for learning involves INTEGRATING
abilities with disciplines and across disciplines
27Examples from Sets of Outcomes for Chemistry
- Communicates effectively, using language,
concepts, and models of chemistry - Uses methodology of chemistry to define and solve
problems individually and collaboratively
28Examples from Sets of Outcomes for Business and
Management
- The student
- uses discipline models and theories to analyze
interdependence among systems, organizations,
individuals, and events (Systems Thinking and
Analysis) - applies business and management principles to
develop and deliver quality products or services
(Enterprising and Problem Solving) - uses team and organizational skills to work
effectively with diverse individuals, teams, and
organizational units to meet stakeholder and
organizational goals (Interacting and Leading)
29(No Transcript)
30PRINCIPLE
Abilities must be carefully IDENTIFIED and
COMPARED to what CONTEMPORARY LIFE requires
31PRINCIPLE
INTEGRAL to LEARNING is ASSESSMENT
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33Student Assessment-as-Learning
- Institutional and
- Program Assessment
34Student Assessment-as-Learning
- A process in operation at Alverno College,
integral to learning, that involves observation
and judgment of each students performance on the
basis of explicit criteria, with self assessment
and resulting feedback to the student.
It serves to confirm student achievement and
provide feedback to the student for the
improvement of learning and to the instructor for
the improvement of teaching.
35Institutional and Program Assessment
- Processes that yield patterns of student and
alumna learning, development, and performance on
a range of educational outcomes. They provide
meaningful feedback to faculty, staff, and
various publics for improvement, shared learning,
and demonstrated effectiveness.
These processes ensure comparisons to standards
(faculty, disciplinary, professional,
accrediting, certifying), and enable
evidence-based judgments of how students and
alumnae benefit from the curriculum and college
culture.
36PRINCIPLE
- Essential to learning and assessment are
- Public, Expected Outcomes/Criteria
- Performance
- Feedback
- Self Assessment
37PRINCIPLE
The effectiveness of assessment for everyone
involved depends on the existence of a total
dynamic system that contributes to the coherence
and continuous improvement of the curriculum
38MISSION
EXPECTED OUTCOMES
INSTITUTIONAL/PROGRAM ASSESSMENT
STUDENT LEARNING
(INSTITUTION PROGRAM COURSE)
ASSESSMENT
TEACHING
EDUCATIONAL PRINCIPLES
39Teacher Education Recognition and Award
- Alverno is one of two teacher preparation
institutions with a faculty member who has
received the Harold W. McGraw, Jr. Prize in
Education. Mary Diez received the prize in 1995. - Alverno is one of seven institutions featured in
the 1999 Studies of Excellence in Teacher
Education produced by the National Commission on
Teaching and Americas Future.
40More on Teacher Education
- Alverno was one of four teacher education
programs honored by Secretary of Education Riley
in 1999 in a competition held by the Department
of Education. - Alverno was one of four teacher education
programs cited as exceptionally effective in
Arthur Levines study in 2006. - Alverno was one of ten innovative teacher
education programs identified by Edutopia in 2007.
41Why People Should Listen to Alverno College
- Alverno stands as one of the few institutions
that offers an existence proof regarding the
principles and theories being proposed as
cutting edge for the 21st century. - For example, Chickering and Gamson (1987) mapped
out some fundamental principles, including this
The more students actively engage with subject
matter, the better they master materials and
develop critical skills.
42Why people should apply what they hear when they
listen to Alverno
- Were in desperate need, world-wide, of more
effective education, focused on the development
of learners - K-12 schools and undergraduate college programs
alike are not as successful in developing
learners as they need to be - Professional schools, as well, increasingly need
to be clear about their outcomes and document
that students are meeting them
4321st Century Learning
- "If America is to meet the needs of 21st century
learners, we must move away from the norms that
governed factory-era schools.... Transforming
schools into 21st century learning communities
means recognizing that teachers must become
members of a growing network of shared
expertise. - National Commission on Teaching and Americas
Future
4421st Century Skills
- The often touted 21st Century Learning Skills map
onto the 8 abilities and the Alverno learning and
assessment process - Life and Career Skills
Alverno - Flexibility Adaptability Dispositions
- Initiative Self-Direction Self Assessment
- Social Cross-Cultural Skills Social
Interaction - Productivity Accountability Self Assessment
- Leadership Responsibility Social Interaction/
Valuing/Effective
Citizenship
45Different World
- Industrial workers were measured by their
efficiency - Knowledge workers are
- measured by their effectiveness
4621st Century Skills
- Learning and Innovation Skills/ Information,
Media and Technology Skills
- Alverno Abilities/Processes
- Problem Solving
- Analysis
- Problem Solving
- Communication
- Social Interaction
- Communication - IL
- Communication - ML
- Communication - Technology
- Creativity and Innovation Skills
- Critical Thinking and Problem Solving Skills
- Communication and Collaboration Skills
- Information Literacy
- Media Literacy
- ICT Literacy
47Black and William (1998)
- Black and Wiliam did a comprehensive
meta-analysis of research on the impact of
feedback on learning. They found that giving
learners effective descriptive feedback rivals
one-on-one tutoring in the impact on growth, as
measured by standardized tests2-4 years of
growth in one year, in some instances.