Your Learning Resources this week
describe different approaches to assessment at the course, departmental,
and institutional levels. Because of today's accountability
requirements, most institutions at least attempt to gather
institution-wide data on student learning. This data can provide useful
indicators of how well students are doing overall. However, for faculty
concerned about student learning at the program, departmental, or course
level, it often raises more questions than provides answers. Connecting
or coordinating the levels of assessment within an institution can be a
valuable starting point for faculty to further investigate what
students are learning. For this week's Discussion, consider the
following scenario: You are serving as a department chair at your
large, urban community college. Your institution has just completed its
first annual college-wide assessment of your institutional general
education learning outcomes. The outcomes focus on written
communication, critical thinking, and quantitative analysis. To gather
data on these outcomes, the institution administers a test, developed by
the college's faculty, to students who qualify for graduation the term
that the test is administered.
Field of study:
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