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Unit Level Strategic Planning: Action Plans & Indicators – Progress and Next Steps

Unit Level Strategic Planning: Action Plans & Indicators – Progress and Next Steps. May 6, 2009 Pat Hulsebosch, Executive Director - Office of Academic Quality and Planning. http://quality.gallaudet.edu. Action Plans & Indicators – Progress and Next Steps. Strategic Planning Background

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Unit Level Strategic Planning: Action Plans & Indicators – Progress and Next Steps

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  1. Unit Level Strategic Planning: Action Plans & Indicators – Progress and Next Steps May 6, 2009Pat Hulsebosch, Executive Director - Office of Academic Quality and Planning http://quality.gallaudet.edu

  2. Action Plans & Indicators – Progress and Next Steps • Strategic Planning Background • Assessment of Institutional Effectiveness • Examples from GU Indicators • Unit Level Planning and Assessment • Examples from other universities • Cross Unit Share and Tell • Next Steps

  3. Strategic Planning Background • Gallaudet had a history of creating strategic plan documents, with limited implementation focus • The current process was initiated by the Academic Quality and Planning Committee of AQP early in 2008: GU Strategic Plan: 2007-2011 • The goal in 2008-2009 was to pilot a process of planning and tracking progress of GU SP 2007-2011 at the institutional and unit levels • Meanwhile, the Goals of 2007-2011 are being sharpened in Vision 2015

  4. Middle States Commission on Higher Education MSCHE: Standard 7 • The institution has developed and implemented an assessment process that evaluates its overall effectiveness in achieving its mission and goals and its compliance with accreditation standards. • Monitoring Report (March 1, 2010) must document: • …Ongoing implementation of a comprehensive, organized, and sustained process for the assessment of institutional effectiveness (Standard 7)

  5. Sharpened Strategic Planning: Comparison Gallaudet’s MISSION • ASL/English Bilingual Environment • Rigorous programs for enrollment, retention, and graduation • Climate of respect for diversity • Research, development and outreach • Efficient and effective use of resources • Grow GU’s enrollment • Improve 6-yr graduation rate • Identify a core set of programs • Research, development and outreach • Sustainable resource base Strategic Plan 2007-2011 Strategic Plan: 2010-2015 (Proposed) Cross-cutting Influences: Deaf-Gain/Bilingual, Diversity, Partnerships, International, Virtual

  6. Institutional Effectiveness includes… Program Effectiveness: how well the unit/program is achieving its goals of supporting the institutional priorities. Student Learning:what students are able to do as a result of completing your program or as a result of using your services It’s a subcomponent of overall program effectiveness assessment

  7. Institutional Effectiveness Indicators GU Campus Climate Survey Diversity Intergroup Dialogues Assessment National Survey Student Engagement GU ASL and Writing Rubrics

  8. Strategic Plan 2007-2011- Focus Objectives • 1.1 Raise levels of fluency and literacy in ASL and English that will permit direct communication in academic settings. • 1.2 Build community consensus on the meaning and implementation of bilingual education at Gallaudet. • 2.1 Enroll, retain, and graduate a diverse and talented student population. • 2.2 Provide an academically challenging general studies, major and graduate level curriculum with both academic and co-curricular support. • 2.4 Link classroom and experiential learning by leveraging Gallaudet’s location in Washington, DC • 3.3 Construct institutional systems designed to promote the free exchange of information, ideas, and perspectives.

  9. GU Institutional Strategic Plan Indicator: Campus Climate Survey (GUCCS) 2009 • The 2009 replicates the GUCC Survey piloted and administered in 2007 and 2008. • The GU CC Survey consists of 40 items, each describing a climate characteristic. The GUCC Survey items were on the 2003 consultant report, and can be grouped into six subscales. The survey also includes three open-ended questions. • The 2009 GU CC Survey response rate was 27%, which is a 43% decrease from 2008. Highest response was from faculty and professional staff (50-60% of total). Though this year’s response rate was lower, it was not unusual for surveys.

  10. GU CCS Institutional Data: Campus Climate Survey • 1.1 Raise levels of fluency and literacy in ASL and English that will permit direct communication in academic settings. • Q14 – There is access to meetings and events for all of the diverse language users at Gallaudet • 64%= Agree or Strongly Agree • Q22 - There are appropriate and adequate means of evaluating ASL proficiency within my unit • 41% = Disagree or Strongly Disagree • Q19 - There are appropriate and adequate means of evaluating English proficiency within my unit • 38% = Disagree or Strongly Disagree NOTE: Responses were grouped by Positive (Agree/Strongly Agree), Negative (Disagree/Strongly Disagree), and Neutral. Response % shown indicates one of these three groupings.   Other Indicators: National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), GU Writing Rubric score summaries, GU ASL Rubric score summaries

  11. GU CCS Institutional Data: Campus Climate Survey • 1.2 Build community consensus on the meaning and implementation of bilingual education at Gallaudet • Q 4 - The concept of bilingualism is clearly articulated at Gallaudet • 42% = Disagree or Strongly Disagree

  12. GU CCS Institutional Data: Campus Climate Survey • 2.2 Provide an academically challenging general studies, major and graduate level curriculum with both academic and co-curricular support. • Q5 – Students are taught and encouraged to observe standards of academic integrity: 53%= Agree or Strongly Agree • Q10 – Faculty model appropriate standards of academic integrity • 51%= Agree or Strongly Agree • Q37 – Individual faculty set clear standards for academic performance, and challenge students to meet them • 51%= Agree or Strongly Agree • Q15 – Students are held to consistent but reasonable standards of academic performance • 44%= Agree or Strongly Agree • Q27 – Academic depts are working together to establish consistent standards for academic performance • 42%= Agree or Strongly Agree Other Indicators: National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), Internship #’s and Location, Student-Faculty Research Outcomes

  13. GU CCS Institutional Data: Campus Climate Survey • 3.3 Construct institutional systems designed to promote the free exchange of information, ideas, and perspectives. • Q21 – Mutual respect is encouraged and practiced among my peers (students, staff, faculty, administration) --60%= Agree or Strongly Agree • Q 24- Mutual respect is encouraged and practiced between and among groups • 47%= Agree or Strongly Agree • Q2 – The university actively demonstrates multiculturalism and social justice..throughout the university community • 46%= Agree or Strongly Agree • Q31- Decision making at all levels is inclusive and transparent • 59% = Disagree or Strongly Disagree • Q33- Transparent and informed communication is practiced throughout the university community • 49% = Disagree or Strongly Disagree • Q30- Information flows upward and is recognized at higher levels of the administration • 45% = Disagree or Strongly Disagree • Q16- There is a sense of security and freedom to express diverse perspectives • 43% = Disagree or Strongly Disagree Other Indicators: National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), Intergroup Dialogue Surveys

  14. GU CCS Institutional Data: Intergroup Dialogue Outcomes

  15. 3.3 Construct institutional systems designed to promote the free exchange of information, ideas, and perspectives. Learning Outcomes: Campus-Wide Dialogue on Sexual Orientation (Spring) N=58

  16. 3.3 Construct institutional systems designed to promote the free exchange of information, ideas, and perspectives. Learning Outcomes: Intergroup Dialogues (Spring) N=36

  17. Institutional to Unit Level Assessment of Effectiveness Academic Rigor In support of Recruitment, Retention, and Graduation A Climate of Respect for Diverse of Perspectives Campus’ Strategic Goals Research, Creative Activity and Outreach ASL- English Bilingualism Efficient Use of Resources • Goal 1 • Goal 3 • Goal 2 • Goal 4 • Goal 5 College/ Unit Action Plans College/ Unit specific metrics aligned to priorities (progress and impact indicators) College/ Unit Metrics Relevant core/ shared metrics (e.g., graduation rates, diversity indicators, etc.)

  18. Examples: University of Eastern Kentucky &University of Illinois at Chicago

  19. Key Accomplishments • Illinois leads in International Education • Only school ranked in the top ten across the three key metrics of Internationalization • International Students– ranked 6th • Study Abroad – ranked 8th • Averaged 13% growth since 2002 • Title VI NRCs & CIBERS – ranked 2nd • $13.6 Million funding current cycle • Created International Advisory Council (IAC) • Representative from key campus units • Will assist APIA in developing international policy • Secured funding for International Advancement Officer • Campus-wide post will lead international development efforts • UIC: International Programs and Studies • Goals • Facilitate Internationalization of campus units’ research, teaching, and engagement missions • Double Study Abroad participation rate while enhancing quality of Experiences • Increase number of Title VI NRCs and expand and diversify funding • Develop Strategic International Partnerships which complement Illinois’ strengths • Continue to recruit the strongest international students and access new regions • Key Success Factors • International programming must be integral to all campus units’ strategic plans • Study Abroad participation rate doubles, quality of experiences and faculty participation increase • Title VI Centers expand programs, promote campus-wide interdisciplinary initiatives, fill gaps in critical subjects and languages • Establish deep and wide partnerships with true international peers • Key Initiatives • Establish working groups within International Advisory Council (IAC) on Study Abroad (2), Strategic International Partnerships, International Advancement, International Students & Scholars • IAC will share best practices on internationalization initiatives and APIA will work with Deans and Directors on implementation • Systematic prioritization of Title VI NRCs’ critical faculty needs and establishment of fully-fledged NRC for South Asia and Masters in European Union Studies • Develop and implement more research and curriculum-based Study Abroad programs and increase coordination between campus units’ and central office • Recruitment of Associate Director of International Programs and Studies, International Advancement Officer, and Director of Study Abroad • Focus group on International Student recruitment led by ISSS and closer collaboration among Enrollment Management, APIA and Graduate College • Launching of Tsinghua-Illinois 3+2 program and continued support for Illinois-CNRS, Illinois-Singapore, Illinois-Jordan, and Illinois-India initiatives 18

  20. Key Accomplishments • Students and Faculty • Eight new faculty positions created in last two years • Improved quality and diversity of entering freshman • Achieved high retention and graduation rates • Knowledge Creation • Started Center for Professional Responsibility • Established Academy for Entrepreneurial Leadership • Infrastructure • Business Instructional Facility to open in summer 2008 • Generate Financial Resources • Fund raising goal of $75 million reached • Raised $31 million for new facility • Doubled endowment in 5 years • Funded annual scholarships and fellowships of $1.8 million • UIC: College of Business • Goals • Attract talented and diverse faculty, students and staff • Provide an excellent educational experience for students • Contribute to knowledge creation and economic development • Engage external audiences • Improve physical and technological infrastructure • Key Success Factors • Reduce student/faculty ratio • Attract and retain top students and faculty • Increase access for non-business students • Develop a broader engagement with external constituencies including recruiters • Key Initiatives • Create new faculty positions over time period 2007-2009 • Establish 15 new faculty lines • Appoint five new endowed positions • Launch new research initiatives • Center for Public Policy and Business • Illinois BIO-BEL project • Increase participation in the Global Immersion Program • Grow participation from 400 to 500 per year • Provide financial resources through gifts • Launch new programmatic initiatives • Introduce redesigned James Scholar Program • Implement new core curriculum • Launch BUS 101 • Initiate a campus-wide minor in entrepreneurship • Improve student support • Continuous improvement of career services and academic counseling • Implement a Formal Tutorial Program for freshmen • Implement a Math Camp for incoming freshman • Enhance scholarship support for graduate students • Enlarge external engagement • Expand lifetime email project • Expand corporate partners program • Increase number of students in Chicago programs 7

  21. University of Eastern Kentucky

  22. PRELIMINARY Unit Level Indicator Data: Strategic Plan 2007-2011 Focus Objectives

  23. Strategic Plan 2007-2011- Focus Objectives • 1.1 Raise levels of fluency and literacy in ASL and English that will permit direct communication in academic settings. • 1.2 Build community consensus on the meaning and implementation of bilingual education at Gallaudet. • 2.1 Enroll, retain, and graduate a diverse and talented student population. • 2.2 Provide an academically challenging general studies, major and graduate level curriculum with both academic and co-curricular support. • 2.4 Link classroom and experiential learning by leveraging Gallaudet’s location in Washington, DC • 3.3 Construct institutional systems designed to promote the free exchange of information, ideas, and perspectives.

  24. Cross Unit Share and Tell • For each of the Strategic Plan 2007-2011 Focus Objectives (ONE HOUR) : • Describe key initiatives your Unit took this year (ACTIONS) • Describe what you know about the impact of those ACTIONS through your INDICATORS * • Describe what your NEXT STEPS are– For Example: • Goal is achieved. No immediate change in course of action is needed. Continued actions should sustain momentum (what action?).  • Goal is partially achieved. Actions are noted but results are not at the rate/level desired. Strategies and approaches should be reviewed and adjustments made to improve (What approaches?). • Goal is not achieved. Immediate actions should be taken to improve in this area. Action steps will be developed and this area will be given priority attention (What steps?). • Insufficient information for evaluating this goal was available. Additional information will be gathered in the remainder of 2009. • At 11:00: Each table shares 2-3 highlights from their discussion • Complete an evaluation for today Criteria For Success: Criteria for Success (Key Performance Indicator) How will you know when you have achieved your goal? What types of data, information, facts, measurements, and/or numerical indicators will you use as evidence of goal acquisition?

  25. Next Steps • …Ongoing implementation of a comprehensive, organized, and sustained process for the assessment of institutional effectiveness (Standard 7) • June 15 -- Summary of Unit Level Actions, Indicators, Progress, Next Steps (see next page) • Fall, 2009 – • Year long calendar for ongoing implement of SP: Institutional and Unit • Sharpened SP Goals and Objectives: 2010-2015 • Mid-Semester- Fall -Unit Level Planning and Indicators • WEAVE Online- Technological System for Managing Planning • See OAQ – Assessment Website for examples of WEAVE use • December Study Day – Cross- Unit Share and Tell

  26. 1.1 Raise levels of fluency and literacy in ASL and English that will permit direct communication in academic settings.

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