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Student Opinion Survey It’s required…how do we make meaning out of it? How can results be the start of action?

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Student Opinion Survey. It’s required…how do we make meaning out of it? How can results be the start of action?. This is radical:. We need to decide in advance what we want from the SOS, not just be unhappy (or happy) with what we get. A possible first step. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Student Opinion Survey

Student Opinion Survey

It’s required…how do we make meaning out of it? How can results be the

start of action?

Page 2: Student Opinion Survey

This is radical:• We need to decide in advance what

we want from the SOS, not just be unhappy (or happy) with what we get

Page 3: Student Opinion Survey

A possible first step• Find a partner, a functional office like

Student Life or Academic Services

Page 4: Student Opinion Survey

How in the heck do we do that?

• Identify areas of concernLook at other assessments: what makes us anxious?Look at data from past SOS administrations: what do we not want to share?What in the environment/ atmosphere/ milieu keeps us up at night?

Page 5: Student Opinion Survey

Be strategic with local questions

• Look at all the opportunities for local questions

• In a given time frame, keep the local questions largely the same

• Compare from one survey to the next

Page 6: Student Opinion Survey

Four Phases• Prep by IR

– Decide local questions

– Decide areas of interest

• Decide on the meaning of the data– To what will you

respond?– How will you report?

• Dissemination of data– Who will see the data?– When?– In what format?

• Take action– Who gets to say

“Houston, we have a problem?”

– Who gets to say “This is what we’ll do to respond?”

Page 7: Student Opinion Survey

Prep Respondents• Yes, have a campaign

–In 2006, you said X, Y, Z–We did A, B, C to address–Respondents want to know that what they said made a difference

–Respondents are volunteers and the best volunteers are prepared for the task

Page 8: Student Opinion Survey

Prep Respondents• In the very few areas you are

specifically interested in, explain to respondents what the content of an item means

• Give them a rubric: what does “Very Satisfied” mean? What does “Very Dissatisfied” mean?

Page 9: Student Opinion Survey

Now Here’s a Rubric!http://www.teachervision.fen.com/teaching-methods-and-management/rubrics/4522.html#what_is_a_rubric

Delicious Good Needs Improvement Poor Number of

Chips Chocolate chip in

every bite Chips in about 75%

of bites Chocolate in 50% of

bites Too few or too

many chips

Texture Chewy Chewy in middle, crisp on edges

Texture either crispy/crunchy or 50% uncooked

Texture resembles a dog biscuit

Color Golden brown Either light from

overcooking or light from being 25% raw

Either dark brown from overcooking or

light from undercooking

Burned

Taste Home-baked taste Quality store-bought taste Tasteless

Store-bought flavor, preservative

aftertaste – stale, hard, chalky

Richness Rich, creamy, high-fat flavor Medium fat contents Low-fat contents Nonfat contents

Page 10: Student Opinion Survey

Prep Ourselves• To what will we pay attention? • Decide in advance• Keep it to a small number (yes,

that means everything is not #1)• Create clusters of questions

around these areas, using local questions

Page 11: Student Opinion Survey

Prep Ourselves• It’s not just an IR job• Needs high level of involvement• To whom will you report results?

These are the people/offices you need to work with before the administration

• Urge these folks to commit to action

Page 12: Student Opinion Survey

Build an Appetite for the Data

• Who are the natural customers of SOS data?

• What is the best way to provide the data to them?

• How do we get feedback about what they did in response to the data?

Page 13: Student Opinion Survey

Prep Ourselves• Conduct focus groups with

students a year before the survey administration

• Focus on the areas with which you are concerned

• Or the areas in which you were unhappy with the results

Page 14: Student Opinion Survey

Make meaning via triangulation of the Data

• Results from the specific administration

• Comparisons of means to past administrations - trends

• Sector rankings• Always display data in context

Page 15: Student Opinion Survey

Understand the limitations of the instrument

– The SOS is a once-over lightly survey of many items

– Most content areas have one question– Broad administration in a semi-

controlled environment– Points us to more research or to action

where general perceptions are validated– Is neither everything nor nothing

Page 16: Student Opinion Survey

Everything is Relative (thanks Mr. Einstein)

• If we are doing ‘badly’ in areas that are of top priority to us, then we need action

• If the results are mixed, then we need to find out more information

• If the area is not in our top 10, then ‘who cares’?

• A plan to improve would involve changes in areas (see #1), and also a metaplan

Page 17: Student Opinion Survey

Conversation based on results of SUNY New Paltz 2006 data

• A few 2006 SOS positives:– We are #1 in “Contribution to

understanding/appreciating ethnic/cultural differences”

– We do well in helping students develop an open mind to the opinions of others

– What do we do to respond to these findings?

Page 18: Student Opinion Survey

• A few New Paltz not-so-positives:– We rank #12 out of 12 in the

comprehensive sector in ‘helping students get a part-time job’

– Plus, our average mean is the lowest in 4 SOS administrations

– Under what conditions would we do nothing about this finding?

Page 19: Student Opinion Survey

• SUNY NP ranked #12 out of 12 in satisfaction with advising

• There is no clear trend in comparing means over time

• What should we do?

Page 20: Student Opinion Survey

• SUNY NP is #12 out of 12 in the “Purposes for which the student activity fee is used”

• What should we do?• What was going on at the time?

Page 21: Student Opinion Survey

Meaning & Action• You can’t take action without meaning• You can’t find meaning without a plan• You can just administer the survey,

and then be faced with a mess of responses that don’t yield much meaning

• The result: no action