Title: Measuring What Matters: Competency-based Models in Higher Education
1Measuring What Matters Competency-based Models
in Higher Education
- Presentation to the State Higher Education
Executive Officers/NCES Network Conference - Washington, D.C.
- May 25, 2001
- Richard A. Voorhees
- Community Colleges of Colorado
- Rick.Voorhees_at_cccs.cccoes.Edu
2Conclusion and Summary
3This presentation informed by
- National Postsecondary Education Cooperative
Project Data Ramifications of Competency-Based
Initiatives - New Directions for Institutional Research
Measuring What Matters Competency-Based Models
in Higher Education, forthcoming, June 2001
4NPEC Report
- Defining and Assessing Learning Exploring
Competency-Based Initiatives (U.S. Department of
Education, 2001) - http//nces.ed.gov/npec/products.html
- Defines and Classifies Competency-Based
Initiatives - Pre-postsecondary education
- Within postsecondary education
- After postsecondary education
5NPEC Report
- 8 Case Studies and abstracts
- Identification of Strong Practices
- An annotated bibliography of competencies
6Why Should You Care?
- The State-by-State Report Card awarded all states
an Incomplete grade for student learning - All states lack information on the educational
performance of college students that would permit
systematic state or national comparisons
7And..?
- Growing number of partnerships between e-learning
vendors and academic institutions - By 2003 the monetary value of online markets is
expected to grow to - 7 billion for U.S. post-secondary education
- 11.4 billion for U.S Corporations
- 365 billion for the global e-learning market
Source Web-based Education Commission
8So.
- In 1985 there were 400 Corporate Universities
today there are 1,000 (Dolence, 2001) - 78.9 percent of advertised postings for
information technology workers did not mention a
degree requirement (Adelman, 2000) - MIT is moving to make instructional materials for
all its courses available free -
9How Fearsome is the Competition?
- It is estimated that 1.9 million certifications
were awarded in information technology by the
year 2000 (Adelman, 2000) - More than 54,000 individual courses available
through distance education (U.S. Department of
Education, 1999)
10Early Stages of a Learning Revolution
- Performance-based learning
- Learning pathways no longer lead automatically to
institutions of higher education
11Early Stages of a Learning Revolution
- Intense competition from organizations whose sole
purpose is to deliver learning anytime and
anywhere m-learning - Employers and employees want the shortest route
to results - It is likely that performance-based outcomes will
drive the assessment of quality in fundamental
ways
12Whats in it for learners?
- Integrate credit and non-credit offerings
- Learning bundles
- Individualized instructional approaches or
systems emphasize small, modularized units of
content - Learners can master one unit before moving to the
next, while giving immediate and frequent
feedback, and engaging the learner actively in
the learning process - Providers that accentuate portability are likely
to thrive
13What is a competency?
- Alternate, interchangeable definitions abound
- Objectives, skills, outcomes, goals, output,
achievement, ability, result, proficiency - NPEC Workgroups definition
- A competency is a combination of skills,
abilities, and knowledge needed to accomplish a
specific task -
14Hierarchical Relationships
15The Credit Hour is Still King
- Default packaging learning in standard length
terms and traditional delivery formats - The concept of seat-time continues to dominate
the 7,000 pages of federal financial aid rules - Predominant public funding allocations are built
on time, not outcomes
16Learning is complex
- Fewer that 10 states administer a common test to
a large number of college students (Ewell, 2000) - Agreement on core skills
- Political willpower
- Creation of accurate measurements
- Student motivation
17(No Transcript)
188 Case Studies
- Kings Collegeembeds competencies across courses
in all academic programs - Northwest Missouri State Universitylinks
competencies with a strategic planning process - Sinclair Community CollegeFocus on competencies
and how they are assessed - Hagerstown Community CollegeModules for
technical programs and career transcripts
198 Case Studies (Continued)
- Community Colleges of Colorado, Incumbent Worker
Projectbuilds competency-based curricula in
conjunction with employers for delivery in
electronic formats - Western Governors Universitymapping of degree
programs from other providers to produce total
competency-based degrees - Proficiency-Based Admission Standards System in
Oregonarticulation between secondary and public
postsecondary institutions - Ford Motor Companyperformance-based assessment
of new hires and throughout their careers
20Dimensions for Practice
- Working with Faculty
- Measuring and Reporting Competencies
- Standard Setting and Bookmarking
- Accreditation and Distance Education
- Creating and Implementing Competency-Based Models
- Workplace Competencies
21Working with Faculty
- Major transformation in mindset and practice
- Work to identify and define specific competencies
- Validation of competencies. Are they essential?
- DACUM and Delphi Approaches for consensus building
22Measuring and Reporting Competencies
- Internal and External consumers
- Simple measurement is not enough quality and
range of competencies need to be communicated
clearly - Competencies must be assessable
- Consistency in writing competency
statementsparticularly across levels - Reliability and validity
23Standard Setting and Bookmarking
- Competency testing has become a high stakes
activity - National tests can be used to set competency
levels or standards - Bookmarking is a technique for establishing
technically sound thresholds - Expert panels of judges
24Regional Accreditation and Distance Education
- Links between competencies and accreditation is
growing tighter - The accent is on documentation of student
learning - Six regional associations have promulgated these
expectations - Distance education activity appears to be the
prime driver
25Creating and Implementing Competency-Based Models
- Models and compilations are available on the Web
to guide institutions - Professions and Careers
- SCANS 2000, National Skill Standards Board,
Wisconsin Instructional Design System - General Education
- Alverno, Rutgers, Trait-based scales
2621st Century Workplace Skills Attitudes and
Personal Characteristics
- Adaptability, flexibility, resiliency, ability to
accept ambiguity - Common sense and ability to anticipate downstream
consequences - Creativity
- Empathy
Source Paulson, 2001
2721st Century Workplace Skills Attitudes and
Personal Characteristics
- Positive attitude, good work ethic, ability to
self-manage - Reliability, dependability
- Responsibility, honesty, integrity
Source Paulson, 2001
2821st Century Workplace SkillsEssential Skills
- Computers for simple tasks (word processing)
- Interpersonal skills, team skills
- Numeracy and Computational Skills (9th Grade
Level)
Source Paulson, 2001
2921st Century Workplace SkillsEssential Skills
- Reading (9th Grade Level)
- Speaking and Listening
- Writing
Source Paulson, 2001
3021st Century Workplace Skills Integrative-Applied
Skills
- Application of technology to tasks
- Critical Thinking
- Customer contact skills
- Information use skills
- Presentation skills
- Problem recognition, definition, solution,
formulation
Source Paulson, 2001
3121st Century Workplace SkillsPremium Skills
- Ability to understand organizational and
contextual issues (legal and environmental) - Basic resource management, budgets
- Ethics
- Foreign language fluency
- Globalism, internationalism skills
- Multicultural competence
- Negotiation Skills
- Project Management and Supervision
- Systems Thinking
Source Paulson, 2001
32Strong Practices in Competencies
- A senior administrator is the public advocate,
leader, and facilitator for creating an
institutional culture that is open to change,
willing to take risks, and fosters innovations by
providing real incentives for participants. - The appropriate stakeholders fully participate in
identifying, defining, and reaching consensus
about important competencies. - Competencies are clearly defined, understood, and
accepted by relevant stakeholders.
33Strong Practices in Competencies (Continued)
- Competencies are defined at a sufficient level of
specificity that they can be assessed. - Multiple assessments of competencies provide
useful and meaningful information that is
relevant to decision-making or policy-development
context. - Faculty and staff fully participate in making
decisions about the strongest assessment
instruments that will measure their specific
competencies.
34Strong Practices in Competencies (Continued)
- The precision, reliability, validity,
credibility, and costs are all considered and
examined in making selections about the best
commercially-developed assessments and/or
locally-developed assessment approaches. - The competency-based educational initiative is
embedded within a larger institutional planning
process. - The assessments of competencies are directly
linked with the goals of the learning experience.
35Strong Practices in Competencies (Continued)
- The precision, reliability, validity,
credibility, and costs are all considered and
examined in making selections about the best
commercially-developed assessments and/or
locally-developed assessment approaches. - The competency-based educational initiative is
embedded within a larger institutional planning
process. - The assessments of competencies are directly
linked with the goals of the learning experience.
36Strong Practices in Competencies (Continued)
- The assessment results are used in making
critical decisions about strategies to improve
student learning. - The assessment results are clear and reported in
a meaningful way so that all relevant
stakeholders fully understand the findings. - The institution experiments with new ways to
document students mastery of competencies that
supplement the traditional transcript.
37References
Adelman, C. A Parallel Postsecondary Universe
The Certification System in Information
Technology. Washington, D.C. U.S. Department
of Education, 2000. Dolence, M. Dawn of the
Learning Age. http//www.mgdolence.com/ Ewell,
P. Grading Student Learning Better Luck Next
Time. In National Center for Public Policy and
Higher Education (ed.), Measuring up 2000 The
State-by-State Report Card for Higher Education.
San Jose, CA National Center for Public Policy
and Higher Education, 2000. Paulson, K. P.
Connecting the Workplace and Postsecondary
Education. In R.A.Voorhees (Ed.) Measuring What
Matters Competency-Based Models in Higher
Education. New Directions for Institutional
Research No. 101. Jossey-Bass, Inc. San
Francisco, 2001. U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics.
Defining and Assessing Learning Exploring
Competency-Based Initiatives by E. Jones, R.A.
Voorhees, and K. Paulson for the National
Postsecondary Education Cooperative
Competency-Based Initiatives Working Group.
Washington D.C. U.S. Department of Education,
National Center for Education Statistics 2001.
U. S. Department of Education, National Center
for Education Statistics. Distance Education and
Postsecondary Education Institutions 1997-98.
Washington, D.C. U.S. Department of Education
Statistics, 1999. Voorhees, R.A. 1997. Student
Learning and Cognitive Development in the
Community College, In J. C. Smart (Ed.) Higher
Education Handbook of Theory and Research. New
York Agathon, 1997. Web-based Education
Commission. http//www.hpcnet.org/webcommission