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Build up, Don’t Burn out. MEREDITH FARKAS. http://www.flickr.com/photos/jgoldmania/1572584897/. WHAT IS A CULTURE OF ASSESSMENT?. Assessment is the norm Doing it for the right reasons Customer-service focused Culture of learning, curiosity Decisions based on data
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Build up, Don’t Burn out MEREDITH FARKAS http://www.flickr.com/photos/jgoldmania/1572584897/
WHAT IS A CULTURE OF ASSESSMENT? • Assessment is the norm • Doing it for the right reasons • Customer-service focused • Culture of learning, curiosity • Decisions based on data • New initiatives tied to performance measures • Changes based on what is learned
WHY BUILD A CULTURE OF ASSESSMENT? • Be better teachers • Make better decisions • Demonstrate value to ourselves and others • Use data to advocate for the library • Use data to grow the IL program • Hold ourselves to the same standards as any other academic department • Accreditation
PSU 4: A NEW HOPE http://www.flickr.com/photos/jdhancock/4424331850/
PSU 5: CRASH AND BURN http://www.flickr.com/photos/carfagno/3089501717/
ASSESSMENT AT MANY INSTITUTIONS • Focused on doing what is needed for accreditation • Coercive and top-down • Little support or education • Coalitions of the willing • Data is gathered, but rarely used • Not seen as an integral part of teaching and learning • Often a lot of cynicism around assessment
“For a scholarship of assessment to thrive, we must align faculty culture, institutional structures, and leadership for change. The importance of this point cannot be overstated. A meaningful assessment program is more than just a new activity to be undertaken, it is a change in how we think about what we do in higher education.”Don Haviland. (2009). “Leading Assessment: From Faculty Reluctance to Faculty Engagement.” Academic Leadership 9(2).
EDUCATION • Most librarians don’t have training in assessment of IL instruction • Need to speak a common language • The development of learning outcomes is an important step • Need to be able to develop assessment tools and analyze results
TOOLS WE USED • PSU Campus-Wide Learning Outcomes • Matrix of PSU Information Skills and Abilities • ILAGO/Portland Area IL Proficiencies for Rising Juniors • ACRL Information Literacy Competency Standards for Higher Education • AASL Standards for the 21st Century Learner
FEEDBACK, FEEDBACK, FEEDBACK http://www.flickr.com/photos/highersights/6231641551/
Nov. 30, 2011Outcomes adopted by AdministrativeLeadership Team http://library.pdx.edu/media/libraryoutcomes.pdf
Strategize Definition: Students will develop the disposition and skills to develop a realistic topic and plan for research; determine what types of sources they should seek, develop an effective search strategy and ask for help when needed. Rationale: In order to find the information they need, students must first be able to clearly define their information need and understand what resources are available to them. Specific Outcomes: • Use general information resources to increase familiarity with the topic and disciplinary vocabulary. • Identify keywords, synonyms and related terms in order to flexibly search information resources. • Define or modify the research topic, question or thesis to achieve a manageable focus appropriate to the assignment criteria and available resources. • Seek out relevant individuals in one’s network in order to get assistance with their research. • Recognize that emotions play a role in the research process in order to decrease research anxiety. • Identify the range of library resources and services in order to develop a realistic overall plan and timeline for research. • Distinguish characteristics of sources produced for different audiences (scholarly, popular, professional, corporate, government) in order to select appropriate resources.
Step 2: Support http://guides.library.pdx.edu/assessment
FUTURE PLANS FOR SUPPORT • Collection of concrete assessment tools and techniques, tied to our outcomes. • Incentivizing assessment? • Assessment Plan Task Force • Instruction retreat - determine questions we want to answer and revise outcomes • Focus on assessment “where the light is better”
WHAT I’D DO DIFFERENTLY • Wait. • Get to know the culture • Build political capital • Don’t go into this alone. • Provide assessment tools that people can immediately use in their classes • Wait some more.
PSU 6: INCH BY INCH http://www.flickr.com/photos/the-good-life/4512791945/
Supporting assessment • Keep the focus on student learning • Provide plenty of education and support for faculty/staff • Develop common learning outcomes for your instruction program • Let faculty/staff choose their own assessment instruments
Supporting assessment • Start small • Focus on questions faculty/staff have • Experiment early on • Look for spots “where the light is better” • Make it clear that individual (class/instructor) results will not be shared • Don’t focus on creating the perfect assessment • Plan for short-term wins
Supporting assessment • Make sure there are no consequences for poor results • Build incentives for doing assessment • Give people time to reflect on their assessment results and improve their teaching • Meet often to discuss what you’re learning from assessment
BEST PRACTICES FOR CHANGE LEADERSHIP • One person can’t do it alone • Burnout is a risk • Best setup: a manager and a peer • Know who has your back • Know what resources you have • If administration isn’t as committed, it won’t happen • If your colleagues aren’t on-board, it won’t happen
Questions? • Find me at • meredith.wolfwater.com/wordpress • mgfarkas (at) gmail.com • flickr, twitter: librarianmer • facebook: meredithfarkas http://www.flickr.com/photos/trucolorsfly/2401196653/