Resources for MJC
Faculty and Staff
An Assessment Framework for the Community
Colleges
Measuring Student Learning and Achievement as a Means of
Demonstrating Institutional Effectiveness
As community colleges organize their efforts to use assessment as a
means of improvement, there are limited resources making
recommendations as to how to do so. The League for Innovation in the
Community Colleges has facilitated the production of this whitepaper
as a means to help colleges create a master plan for aligning
student learning outcomes to strategic planning for the sake of
improvement.
Accreditation and Accountability
Council for Higher Education Accreditation
The Council for Higher
Education Accreditation (CHEA) has published 13 papers, advisories,
and commentaries on outcomes, performance and public information
during the past five years. This document is a distillation of
CHEA’s work, summarizing key recommendations, ideas and effective
practices for accrediting organizations working with institutions
and programs. We hope that these ideas and suggestions are helpful
as the accrediting community provides leadership in addressing
current accountability challenges.
A Test of Leadership
Charting the Future of U.S. Higher Education
A Report of the Commission Appointed by Secretary of Education
Margaret Spellings
How to Bring
Our Schools out of the 20th Century
By
CLAUDIA WALLIS, SONJA STEPTOE, TIME
Magazine, Dec.10, 2006
"For the past five
years, the national conversation on education has focused on reading
scores, math tests and closing the "achievement gap" between social
classes. This is not a story about that conversation. This is a
story about the big public conversation the nation is not having
about education, the one that will ultimately determine not merely
whether some fraction of our children get "left behind" but also
whether an entire generation of kids will fail to make the grade in
the global economy because they can't think their way through
abstract problems, work in teams, distinguish good information from
bad or speak a language other than English."
Writing Learning Objectives
Raoul
A. Arreola, University of Tennessee, Memphis
An
excellent guide for writing learning objectives. Includes
distinctions between goals and objectives, and simple steps to
writing objectives.
Mager's Tips on Instructional [Learning]
Objectives
A Georgia State University website
containing excellent tips on written objectives. Content is
excerpted from Mager, R.F. (1984). Preparing instructional
objectives. (2nd ed.). Belmont, CA: David S. Lake.
Inventory of Audio Recordings:
SLO Practices in California Community College Courses and Programs
Recorded at the CCC RP Group
Student Success conference, October, 2006
In October 2006, due to an unexpected
response to its statewide promotion, the RP Group doubled capacity
for its first ever Student Success: What Counts conference in
San Diego, California. Despite the increased capacity, even
more CCC faculty and administrators were turned away. For this
reason, the MJC Instructional Services Office invested in recordings
of all sessions so that MJC staff could access the material. Click
here to view the inventory of recordings that will soon be available
in the MJC Library.
Should government take a yardstick to
colleges? (Article)
by Mary Beth Marklein, USA TODAY
RICHMOND, Ind. — As the longtime resident expert on
institutional data at Earlham College, provost Nelson Bingham
says he used to feel like the Maytag repairman.
Not anymore. Today, he says, a
"culture of assessment" pervades the campus...Bennett says that's
part of his motivation for participating in the two assessments.
Student learning, he says, is a better measure of quality than those
being used in U.S. News & World Report rankings, such as
acceptance or alumni giving rates, two areas that hurt Earlham,
ranked 65th among national liberal arts colleges. "You show me a
playing field that really gets at the value of education, and we'll
(show that) we've got the goods," he says.
FAQs about Student Learning Outcomes
MJC SLO Committee, Spring 2005,
revised, September 2005
The SLO Committee has prepared this
document to respond to many of the key questions MJC faculty and
staff may have about SLOs.
Bloom's
Taxonomy of Measurable Verbs
Benjamin Bloom created a taxonomy of
measurable verbs to help us describe and classify observable
knowledge, skills, attitudes, behaviors and abilities. The theory is
based upon the idea that there are levels of observable actions that
indicate something is happening in the brain (cognitive activity.)
By creating learning objectives using measurable verbs, you indicate
explicitly what the student must do in order to demonstrate
learning.
Bloom's Taxonomy
(more)
Here are more verbs that Bloom's
taxonomy includes, classified in areas of use to MJC faculty, e.g.
dramatic behaviors, language behaviors, and social behaviors.
It also makes clear what words one should avoid when preparing
measurable objectives.
Accounting for Outcomes (Article)
Marshall Drummond, CCC
Chancellor
University Bulletin, November 2006
Colleges can close the student
achievement gap by focusing on defining problems.
CCC Chancellor
Marshall Drummond discusses the Equity for All project as a “uniform
framework” for measuring student achievement.
From Teaching to Learning -
A New Paradigm for Undergraduate Education (Article)
By Robert B. Barr and John Tagg
In 1995, Barr and Tagg placed an
article in Change magazine that immediately inspired
discussion and reprinting in newsletters. In this article, Barr and
Tagg make the distinction between instruction-centered and
learning-centered constructs in education.
(Robert B Barr is director of institutional research
and planning and John Tagg is associate professor of English at
Palomar College, San Marcos California.)
The Search for the Learning-Centered College
(Article)
William J. Flynn, Palomar College,
Vista, California
In this visionary article, Flynn makes
makes the case for a paradigm shift in education, drawing on global
economic trends, the culture and history of higher education, and
the needs of our students. He details meaningful change cannot
take place in higher education without the meaningful evaluation of
how well learning is woven into our core processes and values.
Accountability for Better Results:
A
National Imperative for Higher Education
National Commission on Accountability in Higher Education
Accountability is often a word that
carries a negative tone in higher education. This study was
prepared by a team of professors (including a former community
college president), governors, policy makers, and legislators that
have "deep experience in higher education policy" makes a compelling
case for a meaningful, simpler model of educational improvement
geared towards keeping sustaining education programs
Student Learning Outcomes and Student Development:
A
Synopsis of the City College
Experience
Katherine German and Lindy McNight, San Francisco City College
A well-written overview of the role of
student services and its critical role in the student's emotional
and intellectual development. "Today student learning outcomes
provide a focus – a way of articulating the intended impact of
learning experiences on student growth and development. As a
result, they also provide a framework - a structure against which
to measure our contribution to student success. Through this
continuing effort to improve impact, student learning outcomes
influence the structure and delivery of programs and services and
help our constituencies, from the students to the public, understand
our intentions and affirm the value of our contributions. Generally
speaking, then, it is agreed that outcomes are important to us
because they help us clarify our contributions to the student
experience and promote our contribution to student success."
American University: General Education
Objectives
A sample of what general education objectives might look like for
students who complete the transferable IGETC and CSU-GE patterns at
Modesto Junior College.
Classroom Voting in
Mathematics
Kelly S. Cline, Carroll College, Helena Montana
This interesting article highlights
how specific classroom assessment techniques in Mathematics help
ensure active student participation, dialog, and success. Some
instructors use similar methods at MJC and find them to be extremely
valuable to teaching and learning.