Title: The Collegiate Learning Assessment (CLA) Project
1The Collegiate Learning Assessment (CLA) Project
- Roger Benjamin
- RAND Corporations
- Council for Aid to Education
- October 10, 2003
2Themes
- Why Measure Educational Outcomes?
- Obstacles to Overcome
- The CLA Approach in Context
- Feasibility Study Results
- An Opportunity to Participate
3Why Measure Educational Outcomes?
- Improve educational programs
- Demand for accountability
- Rising costs
- Reduced budgets
- Competition from distance learning
4Changing Context for CLA (1)
- Accountability drive continues to mount
- Bush administration likely to place performance
measures in Higher Education Reauthorization Act - Tension between higher education leaders and
state leaders appears to be increasing - Strong interest in assessment among private
higher education institutions - Participation/attainment gap between
ethnic/racial groups continues to widen
5Changing Context for CLA (2)
- Budget Crisis
- Private colleges Endowments have declined
significantly - Public colleges 43 states exhibit medium to
severe deficits, totaling 78 billion - Tuition increases sharply
- 10 in during 0203 / 0304 increases could
be higher
6The State Has A Critical Role in Higher Education
- The state provides the instructional budget and
infrastructure support - The state sets objectives for
- Educational levels to be achieved by entering
students - Participation rates by minority groups
- Minimum passing scores for professional school
graduates
7Basic Methodological Hurdles to Overcome
- Direct comparisons between states problematic
- Comparing aggregated scores of institutions at
the state level flawed - Use of proxy measures problematic because of
selection bias
8Are State-Based Comparisons Possible?
- States may conduct comparisons over time within
their states - States may wish to establish minimum performance
levels and benchmark them against the same
measures in states judged most similar to them.
9Institutional Barriers to State-Based
Accountability Movement
- Structure of higher education governance not
conducive to top-down policy strategies - In particular, state-based strategies confront
norms that cede decision making regarding
pedagogy and curriculum, including assessment to
the faculty
10The Link Between Productivity, Accountability and
Assessment
- There must be a metric against which to evaluate
the productivity concepts - The quality of student learning outcomes is the
only serious candidate - Moreover one cannot introduce accountability
until standards of performance are set - However, unless the assessment strategy is
acceptable to faculty little progress can be
expected
11Competing Visions
- Faculty use assessments that are focused on
improving curriculum and pedagogy and more likely
to be focused on the department or institution
and not interested in inter-institutional
comparisons - State-based approaches are focused on
accountability, aggregate data to the state
level, and use proxy measures
12Issues to Solve
- Performance measures may offer opportunity to
reconcile the goals and approaches of the state
and institutions of higher education but
agreement on rules of engagement need to be
worked out - Consensus on measures, approach, and what is to
be reported must be reached
13Current Approaches
- Accreditation Review (inputs)
- Actuarial indicators (graduation rates access)
- Faculty surveys (US News World Report)
- Student surveys (NSSE CIRP)
- Direct measures of student learning
14Problems with Direct Measures
- No common core curriculum
- Too many academic majors
- Course grades are professor/school specific
- Gen Ed skills limited sensitivity to instruction
- Graduate/Professional school admission tests are
not appropriate because - Too few students take them
- Selection bias in who takes them
- Not focused on educational outcomes
15SampleCLA Performance MeasureCrime Reduction
16Sample CLA Performance Measure
17The Task
- Jamie Eager is a candidate who is opposing Pat
Stone for reelection. Eager critiques the Mayors
solution to reducing crime by increasing the
number of police officers. Eager proposes the
city support the a drug education program for
addicts because, according to Eager, addicts are
the major source of the citys crime problem. - Mayor Pat Stone asks you to do two things (1)
evaluate the validity of Eagers proposal and (2)
assess the validity of Eagers criticism of the
mayors plan to increase the number of officers.
18The Documents
- Mayor Stone provides you with various documents
related to this matter, but warns you that some
of them may not be relevant. Your task is to
review these materials and respond to the mayors
request in preparation for tomorrow nights
public debate with Eager.
19Memo
20Newspaper Article
21Crime Statistics
22Crime and Drug Use Tables
23Crime Statistics
24Research Brief
25Crime Rates Chart
26Research Abstracts
27Feasibility Study Measures
- Six 90-minute CLA Performance Measures
- Two types of GRE writing prompts
- NSSE questionnaire
- SAT (or converted ACT) score
- Cumulative GPA
- Task evaluation form
28Sample
- 14 Schools varied greatly in
- Size
- Type
- Location
- Student characteristics
- About 100 students/school (total N 1360)
- Roughly equal Ns per class within a school
- Not a random sample, participation optional
29Small but Significant Class Effects
- After controlling on SAT scores and school
- Mean test battery scale score increase relative
to freshman (sd 150) - 10 pts Sophomores
- 27 pts Juniors
- 38 pts Seniors
30School Effects
Averagescaledtaskscore
Total scaled SAT score
31Feasibility Study Conclusions
- General approach is sound for measuring school
(as distinct from individual student) effects - Computer scoring of answers to GRE prompts works
reasonably well and saves money - An acceptable 3-hour test package would contain
one 90-minute task and two GRE prompts - Some tasks may interact with academic major
32CLA Administration CAE Will
- Provide information on assembling the sample
- Provide templates for letters to use in
recruiting students - Provide guidelines for proctoring the session(s)
33Campus Representatives Have Flexibility In
- Scheduling the sessions
- Campus representatives will need to
- Collect registrar data
- Collect IPEDS data
34Two Approaches
- Cross-Sectional Studies
- Longitudinal Studies
35Cross-Sectional Studies
- During spring term, 100 seniors and 100
sophomores sampled. Analyses will permit
value-added comparisons between institutions. - If subsequent fall term freshmen/first-year
students also sampled, analyses will provide more
sophisticated information about value-added
within institution.
36Longitudinal Studies
- All fall semester freshmen/first-year students
sampled. - Students can be sampled through follow-up
administrations during spring terms of their
sophomore and senior years. Provides for most
detailed analysis of value-added because
individual variance can be controlled for.
37CLA Institutional Reports
- Combining the results from the CLA measures with
registrar data (students SAT/ACT scores and
GPAs) and IPEDS data allows for analyses of
patterns and trends across institutions.
38CLA Institutional ReportSample Page
39Motivation Strategies
- Appeal to the importance of doing well for the
sake of the institution - Create incentives for students to perform well
- Develop incentives for the institution and the
student - Align tests with general education and capstone
courses - Create seminars aligned with the tests
40Important Characteristics for a Successful
Missouri Pilot Project
- Emphasis on improvement
- Useful information for improvement
- Legislative support
- Cost effectiveness
- Contextual understanding of data
- Long-term commitment focus on trends
- Multiple comparative measures
- Control variables on differential student
characteristics - Clear understanding of consequences
- Integrated within existing assessment activity
- Faculty access to illustrations of assessment
tasks and feedback reports - Incentives for participation
- Diagnostic information for individual students