Purposeful Pathways: Designing Relevant and Transparent HIPs

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
About AAC&U AAC&U is the leading national association concerned with the quality of student learning in college 1,300 institutional members—including.
Advertisements

HART RESEARCH P e t e r D A S O T E C I Raising The Bar
HART RESEARCH P e t e r D A S O T E C I
Association of American Colleges and Universities.
Responsibility in a Time of Crisis A LEAP Forum co-hosted by Miami Dade College and the Association of American Colleges & Universities May 21, 2009 Eduardo.
LEAP Responds to New Reality: The World is Demanding More There is a demand for more numbers of college educated workers. There is a demand for engaged.
Our Institutions CSB/SJU Two schools, one academic program Liberal Arts, Residential, Catholic, Benedictine 3,900+ undergraduates 300+ FTE faculty Distribution.
What is LEAP? Roundtable Discussions October 19 & 20.
Connecting Completion and Quality for Student Success Illinois Performance Funding Steering Committee Chicago, IL November 13, 2013 Carol Geary Schneider.
Organizing Assessment to Foster Students’ Best Work Council for the Advancement of Standards National Symposium November 16, 2009 Carol Geary Schneider.
Working with Rubrics: Using the Oral Communication, Writing, and Critical Thinking Rubrics VALUE Rubrics Ashley Finley, Ph.D Senior Director of Assessment.
Degree Profile Bringing new currency to the meaning of U.S. degrees February 2011.
ENGAGING STUDENTS: HIGH IMPACT PRACTICES By Mark Stoner and Vanessa Arnaud.
Implementing the AAC&U Value Rubrics in Sakai Sean Keesler and Janice Smith Three Canoes June 15, 2010.
Falling Short? College Learning and Career Success
H. Kent Weldon Annual Conference for Higher Education Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities Learning.
Student Success as a University-wide Commitment Faculty Presentation August 25, 2011.
Optimistic About the Future, But How Well Prepared? College Students’ Views on College Learning and Career Success Key findings from survey among 400 employers.
NMU Towards the 21 st Century Mitchell Klett Alan Willis Ruth Watry Laura Reissner Gary Brunswick.
Promoting Universal Values in the Face of Societal Change The Council of Europe Caryn McTighe Musil November 20, 2007 Association of American Colleges.
Maps, Rubrics and Templates A Primer on Their Uses for Assessment in Student Affairs.
Changing Understandings of Liberal and Liberal Education COPLAC Summer Meeting Keene, New Hampshire June 20, 2009 Carol Geary Schneider President.
1 Learning and Educational Outcomes: Assessing Resiliency in Life and Career Learning and Educational Outcomes: Assessing Resiliency in Life and Career.
Essential Elements of a Workable Assessment Plan Pat Tinsley McGill, Ph.D. Professor, Strategic Management College of Business Faculty Lead, Assessment.
The Importance of Striving for Equity at Community Colleges
LEARNING OUTCOMES & SNAAP ATHE Leadership Institute Montreal, July 2015 Sally Gaskill, Director Strategic National Arts Alumni Project Indiana University.
More Degrees, Higher Quality Learning: How Do We Get Both? SHEEO Higher Education Policy Conference: Collaborating Across Boundaries in Challenging Times.
Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities Employment and Market Data and Trends Rethinking Success:
Terrel L Rhodes Association of American Colleges and Universities University of South Carolina May 21, 2010.
Liberal Education and America’s Promise: Changing the Conversation about Student Success and Institutional Accountability SHEEO—Denver, CO August 2009.
Vitality in Undergraduate Research Programs Claire Peinado Fraczek, PhD University of Washington Bothell March 7, 2014.
SHEEO Annual Meeting July 14, 2010 Debra Humphreys Association of American Colleges & Universities Raising the Bar: Employers'
Program Assessment: What Difference Does it Make? Ross Miller, AAC&U.
A LEAP Toward an Educated Citizenry: The Role of Public Health APHA Washington, DC November 1, 2011 Susan Albertine Vice President Association of American.
AAC&U Members on Recent Trends in General Education Design, Learning Outcomes, and Teaching Approaches Key findings from a survey among 325 Chief Academic.
MT ENGAGE Student Learning Outcomes and Assessment April 27, 2015.
AAC&U Members on Trends in Learning Outcomes Assessment Key findings from a survey among 325 chief academic officers or designated representatives at AAC&U.
Dr. Tia McNair Florida Connections 2015 Senior Director for Student Success, 2015 May 14, 2015 Evidence-Based Campus Strategies for Unlocking the Door.
Using AAC&U’s Learning Tools to Address Core Revision Terrel L. Rhodes Vice President Association of American Colleges and Universities Texas Coordinating.
Integrating High-Impact Practices on CSU Campuses November 9, 2011 Dial in: (866) Access: # Fall 2011 webinar from CSU Graduation Initiative.
Assessment Instruments and Rubrics Workshop Series Part 1: What is a rubric? What are the required elements? What are VALUE rubrics? February 24, 2016.
Post Graduation Plans Questionnaire SL, Academic Planning and Institutional Research, February 2015.
C OLLEGIATE L EARNING A SSESSMENT Dr. Pedro Reyes, Executive Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs January 2014.
New Models for Partnerships between Co ‐ curricular Programs and Career Services.
8/23/ th ACS National Meeting, Boston, MA POGIL as a model for general education in chemistry Scott E. Van Bramer Widener University.
Report from Curriculum Committee 4/3/2017
Designing Valid Reliable Grading Tools Using VALUE Rubrics
Maja Holmes and Margaret Stout West Virginia University
CRITICAL CORE: Straight Talk.
@debrahumphreys; Enacting the LEAP Vision for Student Success: The Essential and Changing Faculty Roles LEAP Indiana.
Helping Students Connect:
High Impact Practices: HU-HIPs plan
First-Stage Draft Plans for Gen Ed Revision
Falling Short? College Learning and Career Success
The Pain and Promise of CRITICAL CORE Implementation
Strategies & KPI’s: preparing our contemporary learners
Using VALUE Rubrics to Assess Almost Any Program Outcome
Speakers Moderator Ronald A. Crutcher
Natasha Cook, M.Sc., Kerry Ritchie, Ph.D.,
AAC&U Members on Trends in Learning Outcomes Assessment
Randy Beach, South Representative Marie Boyd, Chaffey College
Jillian Kinzie, Indiana University Center for Postsecondary Research
The Heart of Student Success
Quantitative Reasoning
We VALUE HIPs Utilizing VALUE Rubrics and HIP QA Tools in Course Revitalization Presented by Melynda Conner, TBR OSS HIP Specialist 2019.
HART RESEARCH A S O T E C I AAC&U Members On Trends In Learning Outcomes, General Education, and Assessment Key findings from online survey among 433 Chief.
Title V Initiatives to Promote Student Success: Capstone Seminar and Student Research With Faculty May 31, 2016.
Student Learning Outcomes at CSUDH
Pasadena City College library / pathways partnership
Tia McNair.
Presentation transcript:

Purposeful Pathways: Designing Relevant and Transparent HIPs Dr. Tia Brown McNair VP, Diversity, Equity and Student Success High-Impact Practices and Student Success June 21, 2018

Guiding Questions What are promising strategies for intentionally designing high-impact practices that clearly articulate expectations for student learning and lifelong success?

Guiding Questions How can campuses engage in ambitious faculty-led curricular change leading to coherent and relevant pathways?

From College to Life: Relevance and the Value of Higher Education “Only 26 percent of working U.S. adults with college experience strongly agree that their education is relevant to their work and day-to-day life.”

From College to Life: Relevance and the Value of Higher Education “Relevance is a better predictor of quality and value than other measures used in college rankings.”

From College to Life: Relevance and the Value of Higher Education “Relevance is related to well-being…relevance is a more powerful predictor of quality and value than demographic characteristics of individuals, their fields of study, and their levels of education.”

Falling Short? College Learning and Career Success Key findings from survey among 400 employers and 613 college students conducted in November and December 2014 For The Association of American Colleges and Universities by Hart Research Associates

Methodology Online survey among 400 executives at private-sector and nonprofit organizations that have 25 or more employees Each reports that 25% or more of their new hires hold an associate degree from a two-year college or a bachelor’s degree from a four-year college Online survey among 613 college students, all within a year of obtaining a degree or, in the case of two-year students, transferring to a four-year college Sample includes 304 students at four-year public colleges, 151 students at four-year private colleges, and 158 students at two-year colleges unedited 8

*8, 9, 10 ratings on zero-to-10 scale, 10 = very important Learning Outcomes that at Least Four in Five Employers Rate as Very Important Proportions of employers rating each skill/knowledge area as very important for recent college graduates to have* Q.6 employers, Q.12 students Unedited *8, 9, 10 ratings on zero-to-10 scale, 10 = very important

Employers say they are much more likely to consider hiring recent college graduates who have completed an applied learning or project-based learning experience 94% Internship/apprenticeship 87% Senior thesis/project 80% Collaborative research project 69% Service learning project

Attributes employers seek on a candidate’s resume % of respondents Leadership 80.1% Ability to work in a team 78.9% Communication skills (written) 70.2% Problem-solving skills Communication skills (verbal) 68.9% Strong work ethic Initiative 65.8% Analytical/quantitative skills 62.7% Flexibility/adaptability 60.9% Technical skills 59.6% Interpersonal skills (relates well to others) 58.4% Computer skills 55.3% Detail-oriented 52.8% The Job Outlook 2016 survey was conducted from August 5, 2015, through September 13, 2015, among NACE employer members. A total of 201 NACE employer members participated in the survey—a 20.1 percent response rate.  - See more at: http://www.naceweb.org/s11182015/employers-look-for-in-new-hires.aspx#sthash.qQkky4pD.dpuf Source: Job Outlook 2016, National Association of Colleges and Employers

How do we help students develop as intentional learners?

Intentionality by Design

“High-Impact Practices” that Help Students Achieve the Outcomes First-Year Seminars and Experiences  Common Intellectual Experiences Learning Communities Writing-Intensive Courses Collaborative Assignments & Projects Undergraduate Research Diversity/Global Learning Service Learning, Community-Based Learning Internships Capstone Courses and Projects ePortfolios

Intentionality of HIPs Selection Design Access HIPs Defined Evidence Learning Outcomes Assessment Data Disaggregated Integrated Equity

The LEAP Essential Learning Outcomes Knowledge of Human Cultures and the Physical and Natural World Focused on engagement with big questions, enduring and contemporary Intellectual and Practical Skills Practiced extensively across the curriculum, in the context of progressively more challenging problems, projects, and standards for performance Personal and Social Responsibility Anchored through active involvement with diverse communities and real-world challenges Integrative and Applied Learning Demonstrated through the application of knowledge, skills, and responsibilities to new settings and complex problems

Essential Learning Outcomes Inquiry and Analysis Critical and Creative Thinking Written and Oral Communication Quantitative Literacy Information Literacy Teamwork and Problem Solving Civic Knowledge and Engagement—local and global Intercultural Competence Ethical Reasoning Lifelong Learning Across general and specialized studies

Worked with 35 faculty members at seven MSIs to develop transparent and problem-based assignments as part of high-impact practices.

Transparency Designing a Transparent and Purposeful HIP Exercise Transparency and Problem-Centered Learning: Mary-Ann Winkelmes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqUQhSKmD9U

http://valueinstituteassessment.org/

What is a VALUE Rubric? Valid Assessment of Learning in Undergraduate Education Articulation of expected, demonstrated learning at progressively more sophisticated and complex levels of achievement

AAC&U’s VALUE Institute Partnership with Indiana University’s Center for Postsecondary Research Institutions are invited to participate in the VALUE Institute by collecting samples of student work, uploading the work into the digital repository and having the work scored using the VALUE rubrics by certified VALUE Institute faculty scorers. Participating institutions receive data and reports from the tested VALUE nationwide database for benchmarking student learning.

AAC&U’s Equity-Driven Guided Learning Pathways With Equity and Belonging Paramount Values, Institutions Meld High Touch and High Tech to Support and Monitor Student Engagement and Progress, Giving Special Attention to Frequent or Systemic Barriers and Challenges

AAC&U’s Equity-Driven Guided Learning Pathways Faculty Define and Programs Address Essential Learning Outcomes – Across Systems and Within Institutions Sequence Programs, Courses and Well-Designed Assignments to Foster Essential Learning Outcomes

AAC&U’s Equity-Driven Guided Learning Pathways All Students Participate Frequently in High Impact or Active Learning Practices, From First to Final Year Every Student Completes Applied Learning Projects—Connected to Program and Student Goal

AAC&U’s Equity-Driven Guided Learning Pathways Students’ Own Work—including Their Applied Learning Projects—Provides the Primary Evidence of their Progress Toward Degree Level Learning and Educational Achievement

Office of Diversity, Equity and Student Success Thank you! Dr. Tia Brown McNair Vice President Office of Diversity, Equity and Student Success mcnair@aacu.org 202-884-0808