Assessment Results 2005-2006 Academic Year
Every year, the
members of the Assessment for the Improvement of Student Learning Committee
(AISLC) read through all of the assessment reports submitted to the
automated assessment database, www.trinidadstate.edu/AISL/reports/asp/form.html . This is done with an eye toward
several things. First, we look for items that may need to be addressed by
way of college planning activities. These may be budgetary or staffing
requests, or as simple as an instructor changing the course presentation
sequence. Second, the committee reads with an eye toward the quality of
the assessment effort itself, with the goal of continually improving the utility
of the assessment program itself. This second aspect is addressed in an
upcoming article.
Many
faculty indicated items in their "continuance" or "changes" field that may
require budgetary support such as money for:
* videos, DVDs and DVD
players;
* new
supplies and equipment such as graphing calculators;
* stipends for guest
speakers;
* media for storing digital portfolios;
* supplemental
instruction or a teaching assistant on the remote campus for Polycom
courses;
* more timely assistance and maintenance of equipment such as
document cameras at Polycom course locations;
* technology training -
Powerpoint, Vista, and Polycom;
In
some cases, the resource requested already exists. For example, one instructor
wondered "aloud" in the assessment analysis about possible first day activities;
many applicable classroom assessment techniques exist and are described on the
assessment website www.trinidadstate.edu/AISL/articles.html.
Other requests might best be met by taking advantage of study skills workshops
through the Learning Centers. Finally, the Southern Colorado Literacy
Resource Center - housed on the Trinidad campus - has a wide range of materials
related to learning styles available for checkout. These include DVD's and
books, plus consulting with the staff at the center (719-846-5471, www.cde.state.co.us/cdeadult/adultSLRCtrinidad.htm
).
A wide
range of problems were identified by instructors regarding
pedagogy:
- attendance and tardiness problems
- skill problems
(Excel/formulas - root math weakness, writing - root vocabulary/dialog
weaknesses)
- weakness solving problems, analysis, logic, synthesis
-
plagiarism
- test-taking skills, test anxiety
- note-taking skills
-
technology frustrations: PolyCom and Vista
As well as
identifying problems, faculty also made a variety of explicit (and in some
cases, implicit) suggestions for improving
pedagogy:
- more group work (paired problems ... workshop style.... mock
trial)
- provide adequate time to complete assignments and use multiple due
dates as appropriate
- more hands-on work
- writing about results helps
promote higher-order thinking (analysis, synthesis, evaluation)
- use rubrics
and anchors (examples of work, some or all of poor, good, outstanding)
-
immediate feedback (by instructor directly or via Blackboard)
- "real-life"
applications (mock interviews, day-to-day statistics,
- student involvement
in planning
- individualizing instruction, even just acknowledging individual
interests/opinions
These reports are
available for all to view any time; simply visit the AISL website and select
"Database Search." This sends you to www.trinidadstate.edu/AISL/reports/asp/search.html,
which allows you to search the database many different ways. For example,
you can view all reports from a particular department and semester, or by a
particular faculty member and semester, or by course prefix, or by choosing
"Dump entire database," which displays all 593 reports to
date.
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Assessment and Improvement of Student Learning
Committee
Trinidad State Junior
College