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Look into your future

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'It ain't goin away.' June: Today's Introduction. July: Specially appointed Assessment Team Leaders will visit Texas A&M for a ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Look into your future


1
Look into your future!
2
What do these people have in common?
3
Theyve all been working on assessment!
4
Workshop Rule 1
  • Relax.
  • No specific action will be asked of you as a
    result of todays workshop.
  • We will provide a rough timeline for what you can
    expect over the next 12 months.

5
The Golden Age of AssessmentIt aint goin away.
  • June Todays Introduction
  • July Specially appointed Assessment Team
    Leaders will visit Texas AM for a workshop on
    Learning Outcomes
  • August Units begin organizing for the Fall push
  • September Massive Assessment Workshop here at
    Georgia Southern

6
Why Assess?
7
Its the right thing to do.
  • It demonstrates our commitment to the highest
    standards of quality control and continuous
    improvement.
  • Its real simple. If we are not getting more,
    better, faster
  • than THEY are getting more, better, faster,
  • then were getting less better or more worse.
  • Tom Peters

8
Accountability
  • Fulfills our obligation to the taxpayers of the
    state of Georgia to be responsible stewards of
    the states financial and human resources.

9
Self-Determination
  • The courage to measure our own competency through
    internal and external review.

10
The best way to predict the future is to invent
it. Alan Kay Computer Engineer
11
It provides direction and builds consensus
regarding a course of action.
12
It provides feedback on our progress toward
strategic objectives. It informs the strategic
planning process.
  • One of the best lessons children learn through
    video games is that standing still will get them
    killed quicker than anything else.
  • Jinx Milea and Pauline Little

13
It answers these questions
  • 1. What are we trying to do?
  • 2. How well are we doing it?
  • 3. How can we improve what we are doing?

14
How do we integrate strategic planning and
assessment here at Georgia Southern within the
Division of Academic Affairs?
15
Handout 1 The Master Planning and Assessment
Schematic
  • Three Levels of Planning
  • Level I Georgia Southerns Strategic Plan
  • Level II The Academic Plan
  • Level III College Plans

16
Translating College Plans Into Action and
Assessing the Result
  • Tertiary units prepare Action and Assessment
    Plans in support of the Level III College Plan.
  • Tertiary units may include Departments, Schools,
    Majors, Offices, Centers, Institutes, Programs,
    or any other organizationally defined unit.

17
Simplify. Simplify. Simplify.
  • If we do this right, many reports currently
    generated as discrete and separate activities can
    be derived from this single sourcethe Action and
    Assessment Plan. Insist on it.

18
Handout 2 Outline of the Action and Assessment
Plan
  • Part I Learning and Programmatic Outcomes (with
    actions and assessments)
  • Part II Program Review Documentation
    Centrality to Mission
  • Quality
  • Productivity
  • Viability

19
Handout 2 Outline of the Action and Assessment
Plan
  • Part III Other Accreditation-Related Activities
  • For example SACS, AACSB, NCATE
  • Part IV Quality Enhancement Plan Activities
  • Advancing a Culture of Engagement
  • Part V Special Initiatives
  • From Strategic Plan, President, Provost,
    Dean, Chair, or Director

20
Handout 3 Examples of Learning Outcomes
  • Learning outcomes describe what students are
    able to demonstrate in terms of knowledge,
    skills, and values upon completion of a course, a
    span of several courses, or a program. Clear
    articulation of learning outcomes serves as the
    foundation in evaluating the effectiveness of the
    teaching and learning process.
  • Writing Measurable Learning Outcomes
  • Sandi Osters and Simone Tiu, Texas AM

21
Templates derived from last round of IEPs.
22
All Learning Outcomes can be organized under the
strategic theme of Academic Distinction.
23
Identified as an area of weakness by the
off-site and on-site SACS review teams.

24
SACS Recommendations Related to Assessment
  • Recommendation 4 The Committee recommends that
    the University document the use of analyses of
    outcome assessments in decision-making for
    improvements made in its educational programs and
    its administrative and education support services.

25
SACS Recommendations Related to Assessment
  • Recommendation 5 The Committee recommends
    that the University be consistent in establishing
    learning outcomes across all educational programs
    and in developing and implementing assessments to
    evaluate these outcomes.

26
SACS Recommendations Related to Assessment
  • Recommendation 6 The Committee recommends that
    the University expand its evaluation system to
    assess all stated general education core
    competencies in order to provide evidence that
    graduates have attained those competencies.

27
Handout 3 Examples of Learning Outcomes
  • Knowledge KNOW
  • Skills DO
  • Dispositions FEEL

28
Characteristics of Effective Learning Outcomes
  • Focus is on student behavior.
  • Should use simple, specific action verbs, not
    general statements.
  • Should be measurable if at all possible using a
    combination of multiple direct and/or indirect
    assessment tools.

29
Highly SubjectiveSimilar to the Judging of
Competitive Ice-Skating
30
An Example of a Learning Outcome Related to
Knowledge
  • Students will be able to articulate the
    principles and assumptions that are the
    foundation of the Theory of Comparative
    Advantage.

31
An Example of a Learning Outcome Related to
Skill
  • Students will be able to use technology
    effectively in the delivery of professional
    presentations.

32
An Example of a Learning Outcome Related to
Dispositions
  • Students will appreciate the value of outcomes
    assessment in assuring quality across the nursing
    profession and in facilitating the movement of
    nurses across national borders.

33
Notes About Means of Assessment for Learning
Outcomes
  • Can be direct or indirect
  • Multiple measures are best
  • Grades alone are not sufficient (not tied to
    specific knowledge, skills, or dispositions)
  • Surveys alone are not sufficient (too much focus
    on indirect measures)

34
Handout 4 Examples of Programmatic Outcomes
  • A set of statements that describe what you want
    a program to do or accomplish rather than what
    you want students to know, do, or value.
  • Can be as simple as a task or activity.
  • The actor is the program, not the student.
  • International Experience Example

35
Programmatic Outcomes can be organized using one
or more of the six Level I Strategic Themes.
  • The template (Handout 4) is an attempt to capture
    the dominant activities that are common to all
    academic units.

36
Examples of Programmatic Outcomes
  • Develop and expand off-campus internet access to
    Center for Global Business Education programs.
  • Increase the first-attempt pass rate for
    Accounting students taking the CPA exam.
  • Hire a tenure-track faculty member to fill the
    open line in the area of Marketing with a
    specialty in teaching Marketing Research.

37
The Coming Academic Year 05-06
  • We proposed to SACS that Georgia Southern would
    collect assessment data continuously but would
    only compile a University-wide report every 3
    years. The last cycle of IEPs reported data
    from 02-03 and was compiled in 03-04.
  • This means that data from 05-06 will form the
    basis of our next formal cycle of University
    assessment.

38
Protocol
  • While continuing to collect the assessments
    currently in our inventory
  • Create outcomes
  • Set Benchmarks
  • Design Assessments
  • Administer Assessments

39
The Coming Academic Year 05-06
  • Next Steps
  • 1. Under the supervision of the Deans, each
    College should define the units expected to
    prepare action and assessment plans. (Summer)

40
05-06
  • 2. Faculty should be organized to generate the
    learning outcomes appropriate for their unit or
    discipline with multiple means of assessment.
    (Fall Semester 05 after the September Workshop)
  • Borrow. Borrow. Borrow.

41
The Coming Academic Year 05-06
  • 3. Assessment tools and data collection processes
    should be created (where needed) and organized.
    (Fall Semester 05)

42
05-06
  • 4. Faculty should establish benchmarks that will
    be used to assess the outcomes. (Fall Semester
    05)

43
05-06
  • 5. Implement new assessments. (Spring Semester
    06)

44
05-06
  • 6. Action and Assessment Plans will be formally
    collected during the 06-07 academic year.
    (Written Summer 06)

45
Closing the Loop
  • The improvements and/or actions generated by the
    assessment process MUST be based definitively and
    directly on analysis of data and the assessment
    of the outcome.
  • This is the crucial last-step that ties the
    entire process together.

46
If you dont know where you are going, you might
wind up somewhere else.Yogi Berra
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