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Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

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Page 1: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Assessing General Education

Presentation by:

Rich Leiby, Co-ChairAll-College Assessment Committee

October 18, 2011

Page 2: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011
Page 3: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011
Page 4: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Assessing “The Beef”

If you went to this restaurant because you enjoy eating beef, what would you want to see in a beef dish, regardless of which dish you chose?

Was the beef fresh? Was the beef cooked thoroughly? Was the beef cut from quality meat? Was the beef flavorful?

Page 5: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Why do Gen Ed assessment?

MSCHE demands it! We owe it to our students to make sure we

provide the education we say we do

This entails having/creating:

College-wide learning goals A shared understanding of what

performance/knowledge we expect to see Common standards for assessing whether we

achieve those goals Putting the information to use to make

changes, inform budget decisions

Page 6: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

College’s goals for student learning

1. What skills do we need to function effectively in today’s society (both local and global)?(Intellectual and practical skills including effective habits of inquiry and analysis, critical thinking, written and oral communication, information literacy, and teamwork/problem solving.)

2. Why is human culture so diverse, and what can we learn by studying the ways of others?(Knowledge of human cultures through their histories, languages religious traditions, literature, and arts.)

3. Why is knowledge of the ideas and practices of natural science and mathematics essential to our lives today?(Scientific and quantitative skills and reasoning.)

4. How should we live our lives, and how should we treat others? (Ethical reasoning and religious consciousness; intercultural awareness and sensitivity.)

5. How can we transform what we learn in our lifetimes into actions that improve the quality of both our lives and the lives of others? (Integrative learning including capstone projects, learning abroad, internships, and service learning.)

Page 7: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Identifying the areas

The General Education “Pyramid”

Page 8: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

What we need to do

Step 1: Identify the knowledge and/or

skills we expect students to acquire by taking course(s) in this area.

Key question: What is a student capable of doing (or knowing) after he/she completes this section that he/she couldn’t do before????

Page 9: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Step 2Devise rubrics that set up a common

standard by which all students will be judged, regardless of which course they take.

Key question: What common characteristics describe how well the student acquired the skills and/or knowledge we expect of them?

Page 10: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Step 3Devise common assignments (if possible) to test how well the student acquired the knowledge/skills we expect.

Key question: How can we integrate the needs of general education assessment into the classwork or our courses?

Page 11: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

An EXAMPLE:Global Awareness—Modern Languages

Step 1: Identify the knowledge and/or skills we expect students

to acquire by taking course(s) in this area.

Solution:

Students who complete the Modern Languages requirements of the General Education program at Rosemont College will be able to use a foreign language at a basic level of communication that would be understood by a native speaker, at a level of cultural competency that would acceptable to a native speaker.

Page 12: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

EXAMPLE: Modern Languages

Step 2Devise rubrics that set up a common

standard by which all students will be judged, regardless of which course they take.

Step 3 Devise common assignments (if possible)

to test how well the student acquired the knowledge/skills we expect.

Page 13: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Hints for Goal making

Page 14: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Bloom’s taxonomy verbs

Knowledge Count, Define, Describe, Draw, Find, Identify, Label, List, Match, Name, Quote, Recall, Recite, Sequence, Tell, Write

Comprehension Conclude, Demonstrate, Discuss, Explain, Generalize, Identify, Illustrate, Interpret, Paraphrase, Predict, Report, Restate, Review, Summarize, Tell

Application Apply, Change, Choose, Compute, Dramatize, Interview, Prepare, Produce, Role-play, Select, Show, Transfer, Use

Analysis Analyze, Characterize, Classify, Compare, Contrast, Debate, Deduce, Diagram, Differentiate, Discriminate, Distinguish, Examine, Outline, Relate, Research, Separate,

Synthesis Compose, Construct, Create, Design, Develop, Integrate, Invent, Make, Organize, Perform, Plan, Produce, Propose, Rewrite

EvaluationAppraise, Argue, Assess, Choose, Conclude, Critic, Decide, Evaluate, Judge, Justify, Predict, Prioritize, Prove, Rank, Rate, Select,

Page 15: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

What this means:

1. If your name is listed under a core or developing area, you field a course that satisfies that area.

2. You will be asked to participate in discussions about goals, rubrics, and assignments.

a. Area “point persons” are indicated on the sheet in bold italic font.

b. “Point persons” have agreed to do preliminary work with syllabi.

c. “Point persons” will be asked to facilitate the work of the group and liaison with the assessment committee.

3. If you choose not to participate, you will be subjected to goals, rubrics, and assignments the group decides to create.

4. Completion of these tasks may mean that we will need to revisit the GenEd structure and the courses we field to satisfy areas.

Page 16: Assessing General Education Presentation by: Rich Leiby, Co-Chair All-College Assessment Committee October 18, 2011

Thank you for listening!!!

An now we have time for an open, no-holds barred question period.