Title: NEASC
1- NEASC
- Phase I
- Assessment of Effectiveness
- Standards 1 - 11
2Goals for Todays Meeting
- Identify Key Issues or Concerns cited by NEASC
over last 10 years - State the 3-5 Key Elements that CCRI feels it
needs to address in each Standard - Assign a Self-Rating to our Effectiveness
Identify Priority Level - Identify source of information for
rating/evaluating
3Role of Collective Participation
- Using the comment sheet provided, we ask that
everyone provide feedback regarding each
Standard, using the framework outlined in todays
goals! - Your comments will be submitted anonymously
4Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 1 Mission
Purpose 1
- Strengths/successes since 2004 NEASC visit
- We have a mission developed by a comprehensive,
diverse college committee. - New comprehensive mission approved 2006.
- Traits within the mission are accurate.
5Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 1 Mission
Purpose 2
- Challenges/Areas for improvement
- Remaining challenges
- Lack of acknowledgement, publicity, visibility
and usage college-wide. - Increasing all of these would increase the
overall importance of the mission within the
everyday workings of the college community
6Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 1 Mission
Purpose 3
- New challenges/Areas of improvement
- An institutional vision is mentioned in the
standard. CCRI does not have an approved one. - Changing times may lead to reviewing and
tweaking the mission as needed. Should the
tweaking include simplifying the message?
Re-evaluation committee is needed.
7Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 1 Mission
Purpose 4
- Self-ratings Priority
- 1.1 B A
- 1.2 B A
- 1.3 B B
- 1.4 C A
- 1.5 C A
8Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 1 Mission
Purpose 5
- Evidence
- Above based on the fact we have a mission.
- Inferred some information.
- Of the 132 Web pages and print materials
reviewed, only 14 or our public image pieces
include some mention or a link to the CCRI
mission statement. Making it tough for the
community to know the elements of the mission.
9Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 2
Planning Evaluation 1
Some of what we have been doing
- Student Learning Outcomes
- Strengthening enterprise reporting analytics
- More Transparent data-driven budget process
- Peer group to gauge performance (SP)
- Key performance indicators to track progress
- Others
- Strategic Plan (SP)
- Mgt. Ltr. Tracking objectives
- Inclusive Presidents Council
- Improved personnel evaluation systems
- MyCCRI communications
- True relational database
- Acad. Program Review
10Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 2
Planning Evaluation 2
Standards of greatest concern (3-Cs also 4-Bs)
Number Description Rating Priority
2.1 Planning is comprehensive, integrated, participative and communicated C A
2.4 Record of planning success re implementation C A
2.8 Institutional Effectiveness Maintain a process for evaluation of planning effectiveness C A
WASC worksheet ratings
11Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 2
Planning Evaluation 2
Key Issues
Key Issues Description Evidence or Comments
1 Many significant planning activities but fragmented Need to be continuous integrated to be comprehensive (SD 2.1) MP IT Plan not integrated with SP other unknown activities
2 Implementation (execution/actions) not always aligned with plan (intention) need to improve communications (SD 2.4) Absence of review of progress and metrics
3 Need to establish and maintain an ongoing process to evaluate planning effectiveness (SD 2.8) Strategic Goal 4 Standards performance indicators to assess IE of college
12Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 2
Planning Evaluation 2
13Assessment of Effectiveness Standard
3Organization Governance 1
- Board of Governors
- New Board
- Future? Legislative /Administration Plans
- President Council
- President is also the Commissioner
- Faculty union president now on council
- Administration
- Physically decentralized administratively
centralized - No full-time administrator on each campus
- Two vacant dean positions
14Assessment of Effectiveness Standard
3Organization Governance 2
- Governance, What we did well
- Wrote, vetted, and passed governance system (May
2008) - Completed survey of all College committees
- Conducted successful elections for two
years(2008-2010) - Sponsored several activities
- Got Issues? campaign
- Issues of Concern form developed, process
established - Forum on Open Door Admissions at Professional
Development Day - Facilities Survey
15Assessment of Effectiveness Standard
3Organization Governance 3
- Governance, What we did not do so well
- Website not functional
- Lengthy, confusing process over construction
- Meaningful institutional support lacking
- No budget, no incentive to participants
- System lacks full scale participation
- Community does not understand system
- Misperception about nature and scope of system
16Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 4 The
Academic Program 1
- The Academic Program in 2004
- Many programs had not articulated formal learning
outcomes - Learning outcomes were not included or were not
consistent throughout all sections of each course - No definition of an educated person
- No required general education core
- No consistent assessment process for courses or
programs
17Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 4 The
Academic Program 2
- The Academic Program 2011
- All academic programs have learning outcomes
except one - Many more courses include learning outcomes and
it is unknown if they are the same for all
sections of courses offered - We have a definition of an educated person
- We have a required general education core for all
programs - We have a formal program assessment process and a
formal faculty evaluation process
18Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 4 The
Academic Program 3
- Activities in Progress 2011
- Determine if all courses include learning
outcomes which are consistent for all sections of
each course - Determine how the learning outcomes are assessed
for each course - Determine how the definition of an educated
person and general education core are
communicated and understood by faculty and
students - Determine how we know that graduates demonstrate
competence in communication, reasoning/critical
thinking, and the ability to access the resources
for continued development
19Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 4 The
Academic Program 4
- Activities in Progress 2011
- Determine improvements that have been made within
programs as a result of the assessment process - Identify the rationale (mission) for each program
- Determine the extent to which resources available
on the 4 campuses are made available to students
at satellite locations and in distance learning - Determine the difference in the approval and
assessment processes for the credit bearing and
non-credit bearing certificate programs - Determine the method(s) used to insure academic
integrity in distance learning courses
20Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 5 Faculty
1
- Instructional technology
- Ensuring faculty competent in use of technology
to support teaching responsibilities. New
resources include - Distance learning/Blackboard resources
- Centers for Instructional Technology
- Instructional Support Team
- Interactive Video Conferencing
- Classroom and Event Technology
- Electronic Classrooms
- New Employee Orientation to Information
Technology
21Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 5 Faculty
2
- Evaluation
- Review and implementation of student evaluation
instrument - Adopted a more consistent approach to evaluate
Adjuncts
22Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 5 Faculty
3
- College Governance Structure
- Adopted new model which ensures faculty
understanding and participation in committee
system processes - Improved communication via college wide events,
meetings, etc.
23Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 5 Faculty
4
- Banner system
- a review and standardization of course hours
throughout the curriculum. - Addressed inconsistencies in the number of
classroom hours. - More systematic approach to enforce standards
across the board for faculty load and overload.
24Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 5 Faculty
5
- Areas to be addressed
- Cultural competence based upon diversity of
student population, faculty ranks should
diversify. Steps to enhance pool of minority
applicants. - Strategies to support adjunct faculty (contracts,
orientation, faculty mentoring system)
25Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 6 Students
1
- Generally speaking, the College effectively meets
the standards for Admissions, Retention and
Graduation, Student Services, and Institutional
Effectiveness. Where the College falls short is
illustrated below.
26Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 6 Students
2
- Admissions
- 6.2 Academic Standing Policy not in catalog
- 6.3 6.4 AccuPlacer insufficient to identify
needs at lowest end of necessary supports.
Insufficient supports in place for students with
academic deficiencies
27Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 6 Students
3
- Retention and Graduation
- 6.8 Institutional goals for retention and
graduation non-existent or not well disseminated. - 6.9 Data on retention, graduation and other
measures of student success may not be reviewed
in the context of institutional or departmental
planning and improve
28Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 6 Students
4
- Student Services
- 6.10 Response to student needs is not pro-active.
Mission of Student Affairs not publicly
available. - 6.11 Availability of services for Distance
Learning students or via electronic means not
universally available. - 6.17 Training opportunities hampered by staff and
budget cuts. Facilities, technology and funding
are inadequate for current level of services. - 6.18 Ethical standards not publicized.
- 6.19 Records retention policy unclear
- 6.20 Co-curricular goals?
29Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 7 Library
Information Resources 1
- Strengths since last NEASC visit
- Library renovation
- Electronic classrooms
- Wireless infrastructure
- Blackboard
- Banner (new implementation)
- DL growth
- Institutional and educational planning helps
encourage information resources and technology to
be integrated into the student educational
experiences
30Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 7 Library
Information Resources 2
Key Issues
- 1. Mission Grade B
- While NEASC suggests inclusion of information
literacy skills in the definition of an educated
person, it is not in CCRI's newest definition
strategic plan merely implies acquisition - 2. Support Grade C
- Absence of a comprehensive plan to provide
adequate user support (services are reactionary
rather than proactive) - Not adequate time for staff to learn new
technologies nor time for them to create
documentation and train faculty - No time for researching/ supporting appropriate
new tools for instructional technology
31Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 7 Library
Information Resources 3
- 2. (Support continued)
- Consistent funds for resources but incongruency
between funding available and people dedicated
actually to implement those initiatives. - Under resourced areas, generally IT support
services (i.e., Help Desk) - 3. Assessment Grade C
- Lack of measurable criteria of competencies for
teaching online - No mechanism in place to gather student
perception about the quality and efficacy of
instructional technology - No objective way to measure if technology is
promoting better student success
32Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 7 Library
Information Resources 4
- 3. (Assessment Continued)
- No mechanism in place to assess whether students
demonstrate proficiency with information
resources and technology.nor for attaining
appropriate level of proficiency for their
program - Not all programs/courses have published learning
outcomes. - Learning outcomes do not address information
literacy and technology for all students.
(English 1010 and Speech 1100 do.) - Strategic plan mentions mapping curriculum to
definition of an educated personno evidence that
these maps exist.
33Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 7 Library
Information Resources 5
- 3. (Assessment continued)
- A lack of measurable course objectives makes it
impossible to determine either levels of
competence or levels of growth in a student's
ability to assess and use research/reference
materials.
34Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 8
Physical Technological Resources 1
- Standard 8.4
- The institution undertakes physical resource
planning linked to academic and student services,
support functions, and financial planning. - Space planning occurs on a regular basis as part
of physical resource evaluation and planning, and
is consistent with the mission and purposes of
the institution.
35Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 8
Physical Technological Resources 2
- Standard 8.4
- Standard 8.4
- Self-Rating C
- Priority to Us s/b A
- Evidence
- X25/R25/S25
- Experience
- Major Strengths
- X25/R25/S25
- Areas For Improvement
- Addressing Findings/Experience
36Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 8
Physical Technological Resources 3
- Continuing upgrade and maintenance of the network
infrastructure to support existing and future
bandwidth requirements for the next decade - Aggressive implementation of highly available,
fault tolerant, redundant systems to ensure that
essential services are accessible and pervasive
always - Virtual desktop initiative to develop a
sustainable model for delivering desktop services
and information anytime, anywhere to constituents
based upon their role - Vigorous creation of an enterprise-wide academic
analytics agenda for informed business decision
making.
37Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 8
Physical Technological Resources 4
- Vibrant launch of a convenient,
highly-responsive, multimedia streaming service
delivering digital content to all learners, both
internal and external to the campus - Unwavering pursuit of resource conservation
programs, including cooling, print management and
power distribution through virtual machines - Cultivation and provisioning of a warm site on
the Flanagan campus for disaster recovery and
business continuity - Measured adoption of those cloud services
enhancing and improving service delivery for
constituents
38Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 9
Financial Resources 1
- 10/2004 interim finding ensure that strategic
planning is linked to budgeting - 3/25/2009 interim finding address resource
challenges incurred by reduced state s
strengthen engagement of faculty staff in using
data for planning decision making
39Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 9
Financial Resources 2
- BRC implemented merged w/ SPC
- Used web to ease availability of fiscal
information budget process-but is it used?
Include in upcoming survey - Answers to the core questions on which SP was
based have not been clearly communicated to
college at large
40Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 9
Financial Resources 3
- Data collection benchmarks idd in SP for
decision making need to be populated peer
other external validation measures need to be
selected - Need a mechanism by which data standards are
agreed upon, universally available presented
41Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 9
Financial Resources 4
- Use data to address divisional/cultural
differences - Use data to better manage resources align
expenditures to missions/goals - Sufficient strategic alignment of institutional
goals, resources divisional actions?
42Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 10 Public
Disclosure 1
- For our Fifth-Year Report, NEASC raised
assessment of student learning and measurement of
student success as issues for CCRI, which
implicate consideration 10.12 to the extent that
we make public statements or promises about them - Key issues are not in order of importance
43Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 10 Public
Disclosure 2
- Key Issue 1
- Delivering accurate and timely answers to
questions - Self-Rating A-C (depending on topic)
- Evidence Largely (and perhaps inevitably)
anecdotal - Complicating factors (i) Dearth of written
policies across the institution and (ii) the
growing importance of social media
44Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 10 Public
Disclosure 3
- Key Issue 2
- Revising, and maintaining the currency of, OES
and financial aid Web resources - Self-Rating B
- Evidence Ongoing staff review of present
functionality in light of student inquiries - Complicating factor Seemingly endless ferment
in federal financial aid programs
45Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 10 Public
Disclosure 4
- Key Issue 3
- Organizing and designing CCRIs information
resources around what we want students to know - Self-Rating A-C (depending on topic)
- Evidence Volume of questions with answers that
(we think) are readily available in print or on
the Web, but is higher than one would expect even
from a spoon-fed population
46Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 10 Public
Disclosure 5
- Key Issue 4
- Keeping CCRIs Web site (ccri.edu) and portal
(MyCCRI) current and user-friendly - Self-Rating A-C (depending on topic)
- Evidence Same as Key Issues 1 and 3
- Complicating factor Staffing constraints in
securing the continuous assistance of content,
communications and IT experts
47Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 11
Integrity 1
Strengths and Accomplishments
- Breadth of policies available from federal,
state, BOG, and contractual documents - Print and online materials have been updated
- Success Centers for students established
- Access to information about transfer
opportunities and processes readily available to
students - Organizational structure for governance
established - Opening Day Convocation, Professional Development
Day, and annual retreats established - All job postings for permanent positions are
readily available to the public online
48Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 11
Integrity 2
From 2004 and 2009 NEASC Reports
- Adjunct Faculty no standard orientation no
ongoing evaluative review of handbook/website to
monitor effectiveness - CCRI Code of Ethics not updated or aligned with
Mission Statement - Perception (in public media) of favoritism in
hiring remains staff diversity has improved,
diversity among faculty remains low - Key committee agendas and minutes not readily
available online - Committee system within governance structure not
working as designed to strengthen greater
communication, input, and accountability no
evaluation of new governance system occurred at
end of 2008-2009 academic year - Process of solicitation and review of
recommendations for fiscal efficiencies is
inconsistent and ineffective
49Assessment of Effectiveness Standard 11
Integrity 3
Summary
- Communications
- Committee agenda and minutes not readily
available online - No standard orientation, handbook, or policies
for adjuncts - Policies and Implementation
- No college-wide policy manual
- Governance
- Committee structure not working as designed
- Diversity
- Lack of diversity among FT and adjunct faculty
- Perception of unfair hiring remains
50What Next?
- Assemble feedback, distribute to Committees
- Participate in individual meetings by Standard to
review information available - Discuss how to set institutional priorities for
each Standard
51Next Meeting January 12, 2011
- Each Committee will identify 3-5 top priorities
to improve our effectiveness - Committee-of-the-Whole will discuss and attempt
to rank what is most important for the College as
a whole - Group will vote by dots to identify our top
priorities