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Bainbridge College Institutional Effectiveness

Bainbridge College Institutional Effectiveness. Assessment for Technical Programs September 2012 Ruth Salter, Ph.D. Director of Institutional Effectiveness 135 Mobley Administration Building ruth.salter@bainbridge.edu 243-6450. What is Assessment?.

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Bainbridge College Institutional Effectiveness

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  1. Bainbridge College Institutional Effectiveness

  2. Assessment for Technical ProgramsSeptember 2012Ruth Salter, Ph.D.Director of Institutional Effectiveness135 Mobley Administration Buildingruth.salter@bainbridge.edu243-6450

  3. What is Assessment? Academic Assessment is the systematic and ongoing method of gathering, analyzing and using information from measured outcomes to improve student learning. Academic assessment involves five tasks: • Identify student learning outcomes • Define where outcomes are achieved • Determine how to find out to what degree outcomes are achieved • Gather evidence of achievement • Improve programs based on the evidence

  4. Identify Student Learning Outcomes • Use Results • Curriculum Mapping • Gather Evidence • Methods of Assessment

  5. What’s the point?

  6. It’s kind of like paying taxes. The Feds make us do it…

  7. Continuous quality improvement makes us who we are! Bainbridge College, a two-year institution of the University System of Georgia, promotes an accessible, affordable, and excellent education for the diverse population of southwest Georgia and beyond through transfer degrees, technical degrees, diplomas and certificates, continuing education courses, public service opportunities, and collaboration with other educational providers, resulting in life long learning, economic development, and graduates empowered for success in a global society.

  8. Comprehensive Standards 3.3.1: Institutional Effectiveness The institution identifies expected outcomes, assesses the extent to which it achieves these outcomes, and provides evidence of improvement based on the results in each of the following areas: 3.3.1.1 educational programs, to include student learning outcomes 3.3.1.2 administrative support programs 3.3.1.3 academic and student support services 3.3.1.4 research within its mission, if appropriate 3.3.1.5 community/public service within its mission, if appropriate Source: 2012 Principles of Accreditation, page 27

  9. Assessment • What does “good” look like? • How “good” are you? • What can you change to get “good” and then become better?

  10. All purpose assessment loop

  11. Identify Student Learning Outcomes Academic assessment loop • Use Results • Curriculum Mapping • Gather Evidence • Methods of Assessment

  12. “It is not the strongest species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the ones most responsive to change.” Source: Charles Darwin, The Origin of Species

  13. Continuous Improvement of Student Learning

  14. Document Evidence

  15. Assessment Made Easy

  16. Comprehensive Standards 3.3.1: Institutional Effectiveness The institution identifies expected outcomes, assesses the extent to which it achieves these outcomes, and provides evidence of improvement based on the results in each of the following areas: 3.3.1.1 educational programs, to include student learning outcomes

  17. Step 1: Define Programs A progression of courses that lead to a certificate or degree

  18. Defining the program had to be done before moving on the defining outcomes

  19. Identify Student Learning Outcomes Academic assessment loop • Use Results • Curriculum Mapping • Gather Evidence • Methods of Assessment

  20. Today Each certificate or degree program has common HSPS learning outcomes

  21. Tomorrow Each certificate or degree program has its own set of common learning outcomes

  22. Learning Outcomes “goals that describe how students will be different because of a learning experience. More specifically, learning outcomes are the knowledge, skills, attitudes, and habits of mind that students take with them from a learning experience.” Suskie, 2009, p. 117

  23. Technical Studies Learning Outcomes • Students will demonstrate professionalism appropriate to their program • Students will demonstrate communication skills appropriate to their program • Students will demonstrate analytical problem solving skills appropriate to their program • Students will demonstrate the specialized knowledge and skills necessary for career placement

  24. Identify Student Learning Outcomes Academic assessment loop • Use Results • Curriculum Mapping • Gather Evidence • Methods of Assessment

  25. Technical Studies Curriculum Mapping • List the courses in your program in a grid with the courses down the side and your outcomes across the top

  26. Example of Embedded Curriculum Maps

  27. Mapping in Action

  28. Document Evidence

  29. Go Forth and Map!

  30. Thank you for your time Ruth Salter, Ph.D.Director of Institutional Effectiveness135 Mobley Administration Buildingruth.salter@bainbridge.edu243-6450

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