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Page 1: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion
Page 2: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

What is Tuning?

A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion of a degree by:

• Defining areas of competency

• Identifying learning outcomes

• Scaling competencies and outcomes to degree level

Associate’s

Bachelor’s

Master’s

Page 3: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Tuning’s Key Premises

• Curricula should not be standardized

• Faculty control the discipline

• Academic autonomy and flexibility are essential

Page 4: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Tuning in the US: 2009-2010

Three pilot states• Indiana• Minnesota• Utah

Six initial disciplines• History• Biology• Chemistry• Physics• Elementary Education• Graphic Design

Page 5: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Tuning in the US: 2010-2011

Texas• 3 rounds of Tuning

Kentucky• Biology• Elementary Education

• Business• Nursing• Social Work

Page 6: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Regional Tuning in the US: 2011-2013

Midwestern Higher Education Compact (MHEC)

National Tuning in the US: 2012-2015American Historical Association (AHA)

Page 7: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Tuning Educational Structures in the US

Lumina Foundation initiated Tuning USA to address the foundation’s Goal 2025:

Increase the percentage of Americans with high-quality degrees and credentials

from 39 percent to 60 percent by the year 2025

Page 8: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Tuning’s Culture of Collaboration

• Creates space for innovation—emphasizes that education is about learning, not credit hours

• Student-centered degree—emphasizes what students must accomplish over what should be taught

• Makes degree-level expectations explicit for students

• Assures quality for internal (students) & external (transfer institutions) stakeholders

• Synergizes with other educational priorities• Underrepresented populations• Student preparation and success

Page 9: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

MHEC Cross-State Tuning projectThree state project (Illinois, Indiana, Missouri)

Why tune across state lines?• Leverage faculty allegiance to the discipline as primary• Identify the challenges involved in Tuning outside of a single

state context• Enable faculty to “compare notes” about policies and practices

in their individual states

Why Illinois, Indiana, and Missouri? • Utilize pilot state experience (Indiana)• Desire for contiguous states (along with Kentucky)• Capture large metropolitan areas with movement of human

capital across state lines (Chicago and St. Louis)• Coordinating board states

Page 10: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Why is MHEC involved with Tuning?• Consistent with MHEC mission of “Advancing

Education Through Cooperation” and related organizational objectives to:

• Enhance member states’ ability to maximize higher education opportunity and outcomes

• Promote improved student access, affordability and

completion

• Encourage quality programs and services

• Facilitate dialogue among higher education stakeholders to improve higher education policy and practice

Page 11: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

MHEC Cross-State Tuning project• Why psychology and marketing?

• Have not been tuned previously in the U.S.• Among the most popular majors and degree programs (and

a “default” or “fall back” major for many)• Programs at the two-year, four-year, and graduate levels (or

so we thought)• Multiple, varied career/graduate paths• Broad range of application of knowledge and developed

skills• Psychology – among the disciplines most likely to lead to

hostile questioning from family members as to what kind of job could possibly be secured with such a major

Page 12: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

MHEC Tuning Steps• “Pre-launch” meetings with SHEEO agency reps and

other key individuals in the three states• Involvement of SHEEO agencies, system personnel,

and independent associations to identify faculty participants

• Identification of project evaluator and evaluative framework

• Opening convening in November 2011• Monthly workgroup meetings January to June 2012• Engage SHEEO agency personnel as supporters and

cheerleaders• Presentations (with faculty) during state visits and at

conferences

Page 13: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

MHEC Tuning Team StructureTuning group composition

• Fifteen faculty on each disciplinary team (psychology and marketing) – 5 from each state

• Tenured or senior faculty engaged in the teaching of undergraduates

• Sector representation:oOne from a public research universityoOne from a public comprehensive universityoTwo from a public two-year degree granting collegeoOne from a private/independent college

Page 14: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Progress To Date• Workgroups have completed Steps 1 and 2:

• Draft of general/core competencies and learning outcomes for (each) degree level

• Draft of discipline specific competencies and learning outcomes for (each) degree level

• Mapping of career pathways• The workgroups are now focused on gathering

stakeholder feedback on their drafted competencies and learning outcomes

Page 15: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Observations and Challenges

• Enhanced awareness and heightened respect for colleagues at other types of institutions

• Personal enjoyment and professional growth of faculty

• Groups need more time to get to know each other before diving into work

• Role differences in psychology: researchers vs. clinicians (and APS vs. APA)

Page 16: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Observations and Challenges

• What to do with existing curriculum and outcomes statements from professional associations (such as the APA)

• The associate degree problem• The master’s degree problem!• General/core vs. specific/disciplinary competencies

• Appropriate role for SHEEO agencies as well as the project staff (“bottom up” vs. “top down” approach)

Page 17: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Post-Secondary Participation in TexasFall 2011

Total Fall 2011

Public Universities 568,938

Public Two-Year Colleges 752,986

All Health-Related 23,903

Independent Col. & Univ. 123,690

Career Colleges 81,270

Total 1,550,787

Page 18: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

What is the Tuning Texas Initiative?• Faculty-driven

process; faculty work together across sectors

• Includes input from students, graduates, and employers

• Focus is first on the discipline, then on courses

Faculty

Documents

EmployersStudents/

Graduates

Page 19: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

• Tuning 2010 (finalized):• Civil Engineering, Industrial Engineering, Electrical

Engineering, Mechanical Engineering

• Tuning 2011 (final drafts):• Chemical Engineering, Biomedical Engineering,

Biology, Chemistry

• Tuning 2012 (forthcoming):• Mathematics, Business, Computer and Information

Sciences, Management Information Systems

Programs Tuned/Being Tuned

Page 20: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Map of Institutions with Faculty on Texas Tuning Committees

Page 21: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Example:Tuning of Civil Engineering

• The content of the following slides has been extracted from the May 2011 document, “Tuning of Civil Engineering.”

• The full document is available online at: www.thecb.state.tx.us/Tuning_Engineering_in_Texas 

Page 22: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

CE Expertise Profile

Page 23: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

CE Key Competencies Diagram

Page 24: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

CE Employment Profile

Page 25: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Participants to Date in the Voluntary Course Transfer Agreements Pertaining to Bachelor of Science Degrees in

Civil, Electrical, Industrial, and Mechanical Engineering

For more information, please visit: http://www.thecb.state.tx.us/tuningtexas

Page 26: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Is Tuning Making a Difference in the Culture of Higher Education?

The Utah Experience

Page 27: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Past and Present

• 2009- History and Physics (associate and bachelor’s)

• 2012- History and Physics (masters and secondary education)- General Education Mathematics- Elementary Education

• Common Core State Standards

- Degree Qualifications Profile

Page 28: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Principle

• Faculty Driven (bureaucrats out of way)• Muddling (collaboration)

- Time and space for intellectual exploration

• Learning is not linear• Add depth and coherence

• To what students learn• To how students learn• To how they demonstrate learning• To how we teach

Page 29: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Outgrowth of Tuning

• Business Innovation Factory

• American Historical Association

• Convergence with other projects• Quality Collaboratives (AAC&U)• Western Interstate Passport Initiative (WICHE)

Page 30: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Next Steps

• Integrate into department learning outcomes.

• Work more closely with regional, specialized accreditation.

• Change conversation from seat time and credit to learning outcomes and competencies.

• Introduce Degree Qualifications Profile:- Transparency and coherence in discipline along Essential Learning Outcomes

Page 31: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Challenges

• Continuity - Faculty change roles

- Part-time faculty

- Elementary Education

- Time• Learning takes practice• Learning is not linear

Page 32: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

Is Tuning making a difference in the culture

of higher education?• Nascent

• Too early to make definitive statements

• Have Faith!

Page 33: What is Tuning? A collaborative, faculty-driven process that identifies what a student should know and be able to do in a chosen discipline at the completion

For more information…

For more information on Tuning USA, please visit: http://www.tuningusa.org/

For more specific information on the Tuning Texas Initiative, please visit: http://www.thecb.state.tx.us/TuningTexas

Tuning USA Guide: http://www.tuningusa.org/Library.aspx