Economics
Discipline Assessment 2006-2007
Scope
of assessment activities
___⇒__Course-embedded
assessment
___⇒___
Pre- and post-testing
______
Outside the classroom
______
Across the discipline
Direct
measures of student learning
______
Capstone experience
______
Portfolio assessment
______
Standardized tests
______
Performance on national licensure, certification or
preprofessional
exams
______
Qualitative internal and external juried review of
of
comprehensive senior projects
______
Externally reviewed exhibitions and performances in
the
arts
______
External evaluation of performance during internships
Discussion
and Description
Discipline
goals, direct measures, and improved student learning
1.
Economics discipline goals. The economics curriculum is designed to ensure that
students
á
understand the nature and functioning of the market
system.
á
are able to define criteria for assessing efficiency in
the provision of goods and services.
á
investigate and assess the operation of economic
institutions.
á
are able to evaluate alternative policies intended to
enhance economic outcomes.
á
develop competence in quantitative methods and
computing methods.
á
are able to conceptualize and analyze problems using
the tools of economic theory, and communicate the results.
á
are competent in oral and written communication.
á
are adequately prepared for graduate or professional
school.
2.
Discipline goals and course work
The
assessment plan relates discipline goals to the economics courses where they
will be met.
3.
Course-embedded assessment
Money,
Banking, and Financial Markets. In this
upper division class, the instructor identified two broad learning objectives
that students should meet, and for each objective established three criteria
for determining whether students had met them. The assessment tool was a
multi-part in-class essay question admininstered two months into the semester
and again near the end of the semester. The instructor then ranked each
studentÕs performance on each criterion as good, fair or poor. The results[1]
show improvement in student learning that is more often dramatic than not.
General
education categories spanned by the discipline
Almost
all economics courses bear one of the following general education designators:
SS, human behavior, social processes, and institutions; IP, international
perspective; HDiv, human diversity; M/SR, mathematical/ symbolic reasoning;
Hist, historical perspectives; or Envt, people and the environment. Directed
study and the seminar for social science majors bear no general education
designator.
Education
Discipline Assessment 2006-2007
Scope
of assessment activities
___⇒__Course-embedded
assessment
___⇒___
Pre- and post-testing
___⇒__
Outside the classroom
___⇒__
Across the discipline
Direct
measures of student learning
___⇒__
Capstone experience
___⇒__
Portfolio assessment
___⇒__
Standardized tests
___⇒__
Performance on national licensure, certification or
preprofessional
exams
______
Qualitative internal and external juried review of
of
comprehensive senior projects
______
Externally reviewed exhibitions and performances in
the
arts
______
External evaluation of performance during internships
Discussion
and Description
Discipline
goals, direct measures, and improved student learning
1.
Discipline overview
The
curriculum is divided into three subcurricula, Education, Elementary Education,
Secondary Education, and Education. Elementary Education is offered as a major,
but Secondary Education is a licensure program in which the student majors in a
discipline from one of the other[2]
Divisions: Humanities; Science and Mathematics; or Social Sciences.
2.
Discipline goals
2a.
Elementary and Secondary Education
The
goals for Elementary and Secondary Education are designed to help students
(future teachers) to
á
acquire the knowledge, skills, and dispositions
necessary to being a competent teacher
á
understand central concepts, tools of inquiry, and
structures of disciplines taught in schools
á
understand children and adolescents and their
individual and group behavior
á
plan and implement instruction adapted to learners of
diverse backgrounds and abilities
á
communicate effectively
á
encourage critical thinking and problem solving
á
use formal and informal methods of assessment
á
collaborate with parents/guardians, families, school
colleagues, and the community in an ethical manner.
These
goals are based on the ten Standards of Effective Practice of the state of
Minnesota.
2b.
Education
The
courses are designed to offer students the opportunity to study education and
its role in society.
3.
A three-fold assessment strategy in Elementary and Secondary Education
The
discipline uses both internal and external measures of the degree to which
students achieve the goals listed above. Three principal assessment tools are
á
PRAXIS II exams
á
summative evaluation scores for the final student
teaching experience
á
key assignments in the capstone course: portfolio
assessment
4.
PRAXIS II exams
There
are two parts to these standardized, external exams, the PLT (Pedagogy,
Learning and Teaching—or the pedagogy part for short) and the content
part. The state requires that students pass both parts for licensure. In 2007
UMM had a 100 % pass rate for both parts (29 students in Elementary Education
and 25 in Secondary).[3]
During the 2002-2007 period, UMM students took content exams in eighteen areas,
with pass rates exceeding state pass rates in fifteen of them, although in some
instances the differences in rates are small and some small sample sizes
vitiate the comparison.[4]
Performance
on PRAXIS II may also signal areas where student learning is problematic. One
example is discussed in the disciplineÕs report, which details the problem,
describes the facultyÕs response, and documents the improvement in student learning.
Another issue being addressed by the Elementary Education faculty is the
presence of two students in the cohort of 2009 for whom English is a second
language, the issue being whether PRAXIS II will fairly assess their learning.
5.
Summative evaluation of student teaching[5]
Elementary
and secondary education students complete eleven weeks of student teaching as
their final field experience. During that field experience, they apply the
knowledge and skills studied in the programs. In this experience, all ten
Standards of Effective Practice are implemented and assessed. Cooperating teachers and university
supervisors complete at least three formative evaluations that highlight
strengths in performance and assist the student in identifying weaknesses.
Goals are established, additional coaching is provided, and students are given
the opportunity to address areas of concern. The summative evaluation assesses
all of the program goals and is completed by cooperating teachers and
university supervisors. Data from final field experience evaluations for the
2006-2007 cohort reveal that all but one student met minimum proficiency for
licensure (please see Table One). No other student received less than an
ÒaverageÓ rating on any part of their field experience evaluation. In fact,
most earned high marks from cooperating teachers or university supervisors.
6.
Key assignments from the capstone course: portfolio assessment
The
goals of the capstone course are to
á
facilitate professional reflection
á
enable students to explore professional issues related
to teaching
á
assist students in evaluating the effects of their
professional choices and actions on students, parents, other professionals, and
the larger learning community.
The
primary assessment of student learning in the capstone course is the
professional portfolio created by students. Students begin creating this
portfolio when they enter the program and continually revise it throughout. The
portfolio has ten sections, one section for each of MinnesotaÕs Standards of
Effective Practice—standards in which students must demonstrate
competency before being licensed as teachers. For each standard, students write
an essay that describes their growth and development in the standard, provides
evidence of that growth and sets new goals for deeper understanding. This
process again exemplifies the formative assessment built into the teacher
education program. Students have multiple opportunities to write, reflect on
feedback, and reconstruct their portfolio throughout the program. In this
course, the students write their final statements. Each faculty member is
responsible for evaluating 10-12 professional portfolios. Prior to the
evaluation period, faculty members engage in a reliability session to ensure
fair and reliable grading practices across faculty members. In this session,
faculty read and grade sample essays and discuss the reasons for their grades
and discuss any discrepancies. The process continues with multiple readings and
discussions until the faculty are grading in a manner consistent with one
another.
7.
Course-embedded assessment
All
courses in the elementary and secondary education programs are crafted around
the ten Standards of Effective Practice. Lectures, readings, and assignments
are linked to specific standards and the links are usually recorded on the
syllabus. The courses also are based on mastery learning. This means that
students must perform all tasks at a proficient level. If a student does not
successfully master a task, he or she continues to work on this task and repeat
an assignment until it is mastered.
An
example of assessment in one course is in Appendix 1 of the Education
disciplineÕs report. Assessment is built around a teaching and learning
strategies mini-unit assignment. The final goal is to have the student plan and
teach the mini-unit to his or her practicum students, and then to assess their
learning. The studentÕs mastery in turn is evaluated by the instructor by means
of a scoring rubric that the student has seen in advance. The route to
attaining this goal is laid out in an eight-step plan.
8.
Students who fail to meet the requirements
The
Education disciplineÕs report notes that its Òdata clearly show that most of
the students far surpass the minimum requirements set by our own program and
those of the state and national accreditation agencies.Ó The disciplineÕs
faculty continues to seek ways to assist the rare student who does not
self-select out of the program but is struggling to meet its requirements.
General
education categories spanned by the discipline
Many Education courses but by no means all carry one of the general education designators: IP, international perspective; Hum, communication, language, literature, and philosophy; E/CR, ethical and civic responsibility; or FL, foreign languages. Only two courses in Elementary Education and only two in Secondary carry designators, one IP, and one HDiv, human diversity, in each of the subcurricula.
English
Discipline Assessment 2006-2007
Scope
of assessment activities
___⇒__Course-embedded
assessment
___⇒___
Pre- and post-testing
______
Outside the classroom
___⇒__
Across the discipline
Direct
measures of student learning
___⇒__
Capstone experience
___⇒__
Portfolio assessment
______
Standardized tests
______
Performance on national licensure, certification or
preprofessional
exams
______
Qualitative internal and external juried review of
of
comprehensive senior projects
______
Externally reviewed exhibitions and performances in
the
arts
______
External evaluation of performance during internships
Discussion
and Description
Discipline
goals, direct measures, and improved student learning
1.
English discipline objectives. Students learn to
á
discuss, orally and in writing, what they have read:
how the author has structured the text, and how literary language achieves its
effects and directs the readersÕ response to the text.
á
be effective critical and imaginative readers and
writers.
The
English program engages students in the study of primarily British and American
literature of different periods, with an emphasis on various approaches to
literary study.
2.
Assessment across the discipline[6].
This is achieved through a three-fold approach of assessing
i. the
college writing program
ii. the
gateway course to the major
iii. the capstone
course.
In
all three instances, there are variations on the pre-test/post-test method
(testing = annotating or writing) and strategies for improving student
learning.
3.
Assessment of College Writing.
3a.
Overview.
College
Writing fulfills a general education requirement for all UMM students. The
current course goals are the result of English faculty deliberations in
2002-2003 that align their concerns with those expressed in a
cross-disciplinary survey of the college faculty.
3b.
Three broad goals. Students should be able to
á
state an argumentative thesis clearly at the beginning
of a paper.
á
analyze (rather than merely summarize) evidence for
that thesis.
á
appropriately revise the paperÕs content and/or form in
response to peer and instructor feedback.
3c.
Specific learning objectives. By the end of the course students should be able
to
á
understand and recognize the basic conventions of
effective academic writing.
á
articulate a specific and argumentative thesis.
á
develop and organize an argument.
á
supply and analyze appropriate evidence in support of a
claim.
á
understand citation norms and use an appropriate
citation format.
á
paraphrase, summarize, and effectively quote sources.
á
locate sentence-level errors in their writing and find
answers/help in a reference book.
á
understand writing as a process (planning, drafting,
revising, editing).
á
make meaningful and substantive revisions in their own
work.
á
offer constructive comments, both in writing and
orally, on peersÕ work.
3d.
Portfolio assessment.[7]
Students
wrote three drafts of each required paper. The final portfolio consisted of the
third draft of all papers. For each draft and for each of the three broad goals
in 3b, the instructor rated each student in one of three categories: having
mastery; having competence; or lacking competence. This method measured the
degree of achievement of course goals and the degree of improvement for each
student. The set of ratings for the semester measured achievement and
improvement for the class as a whole.
3e.
A conclusion and moving forward.
The
instructor concludes that Òour current methods of assessment in these areas are
generally successful.Ó She states that two English faculty have been awarded a
grant to revise the course syllabus to Òresult in more effective
cross-disciplinary preparation for our students.Ó
4.
Assessment of the gateway course. Introduction to Literature.
4a.
Overview.
ÒThis
course was introduced in 2003 to address a substantial shortcoming in studentsÕ
preparation for upper-level English courses.Ó[8]
The vehicle for addressing this shortcoming is poetry analysis, a task that
students find particularly difficult.
4b.
Course learning objectives.[9]
They are to improve studentsÕ
i. ability
to READ carefully and actively.
ii. ability
to understand and discuss literature analytically, using the conventional
terminology.
iii. understanding
of and ability to implement processes of making a critical argument.
4c.
Assessment tool.
Students
annotate a poem at three times during the semester. Each time and for each
learning objective the student is rated as having mastery, having competence,
or lacking competence. The instructor discusses the first annotation with the
students, who then practice annotating in class with instructor feedback. The second
and third annotations measure improvement and the degree to which the learning
objectives have been met.[10]
4d.
Future issues.
The
English discipline is discussing, as any large discipline should, the problems
that arise from having multiple instructors in the course who approach the
material in slightly different ways. Another is issue is to make certain that
students, who by and large are reaching the learning objectives, retain those
abilities. The discipline is discussing whether an annotation exercise should
be employed early in all of the survey courses to reinforce those skills.
5.
Assessment of the capstone course. Research seminar.
5a.
Overview.
All
English majors must complete at least one research seminar from the list of ten
in the 2007-2009 University of Minnesota, Morris Catalog.
5b.
Learning objectives. The seminar adds two to those listed for the discipline:
á
the development of sophisticated research skills.
á
the ability to engage publicly with current debates in
the field.
5c.
Assessment tools.
In
reaching the first objective, students must produce an annotated bibliography,
which is judged on the number and quality of the sources, and on the quality of
the annotations.[11] The
bibliography provides the basis for writing a substantial research essay, about
ten pages in length.
To
reach the second, students must give a fifteen to twenty minute oral
presentation in the public English Research Symposium, which follows models of
conferences attended by English academics. This includes being a member of a
panel.
5d.
Improving student learning.
To
address weaknesses in preparing annotated bibliographies, finding appropriate
sources will be introduced into junior level survey courses, as well as the art
of writing annotations, and more time will be devoted to sources in the seminar
itself. Problematic bibliographies received faculty and conference attention.
Faculty critiqued drafts of essays.
General
education categories spanned by the discipline
Three
English courses carry the CW, college writing, general education designator.
Almost all others carry one of the following: Hum, communication, language,
literature, and philosophy; HDiv, human diversity; ArtP, artistic performance;
or Envt, people and the environment. The only exception is directed study,
which carries none.
French
Discipline Assessment 2006-2007
Scope
of assessment activities
___⇒__Course-embedded
assessment
___⇒___
Pre- and post-testing
___⇒__
Outside the classroom
___⇒__
Across the discipline
Direct
measures of student learning
___⇒__
Capstone experience
______
Portfolio assessment
___⇒__
Standardized tests
___⇒__
Performance on national licensure, certification or
preprofessional
exams
______
Qualitative internal and external juried review of
of
comprehensive senior projects
______
Externally reviewed exhibitions and performances in
the
arts
______
External evaluation of performance during internships
Discussion
and Description
Discipline
goals, direct measures, and improved student learning
1.
French discipline learning objectives
á
An introduction to the four skills of communication in
French: speaking, listening, reading, and writing.
á
Intermediate French: raising the level of
sophistication in communication and broadening the cultural base to include
French and francophone cultures.
á
Continuation of objectives 1 and 2; mastery of literary
texts and initiation into critical approaches and sharpening analytical skills.
á
Application of objectives 1 through 3 above to original
work in the field; post-baccalaureate employment and graduate study.
2.
Two phases of assessment
The
Iowa Placement Test is used to assess the first two years of the major, i.e.,
the beginning and intermediate phases. The last two years, the advanced phase,
are assessed using the American Council for the Teaching of Foreign Languages
(ACTFL) Proficiency Guidelines for Speaking and Writing.
3.
Senior seminar
The
senior seminar is the disciplineÕs capstone experience, in which the student
produces a substantial scholarly or creative work at a level appropriate for an
undergraduate. It requires intensive revision of a major writing assignment and
a public presentation given in French.
4.
First phase
The
Iowa Placement Test (IPT) is used in a pre-test/post-test format. It is
administered to all students who have had previous experience with French and
wish to enroll in French. It is administered again at the end of second
semester of beginning French, and for a third time at the end of the second
year, i.e., at the end of the second semester of intermediate French. The IPT
assesses reading, grammar, and listening comprehension skills.
5.
Second phase
5.1
Writing proficiency. The third year of the major requires one semester courses
in conversation and composition, and in reading and analysis of texts. Towards
the end of the second semester of the third year, a writing sample is obtained
and assessed using ACTFL guidelines. Students complete a second writing sample
in the capstone course that is assessed with respect to the same guidelines and
is compared to the third year sample.
5.2
Speaking proficiency. The oral presentation in the senior seminar is assessed
using ACTFL guidelines.
6.
Outcomes
6.1
First phase.
Student
IPT scores are compared to a standard score representing the studentÕs
preparedness for the next course in the major.[12]
6.2
Second phase
On
the basis of assessment, speakers and writers are placed in one of ten
categories: superior; advanced (high, mid or low); intermediate (high, mid or
low); and novice (high, mid or low).[13]
7.
Improving student learning
Assessment
in the French discipline has led to the following initiatives.
á
Four new courses will weave grammar instruction through
all four years of coursework. These are courses in phonetics, translation,
advanced grammar, and business French.
á
A system of one credit ÒmaintenanceÓ courses will allow
students to practice oral skills in a more intimate setting.
á
A professionalization component has been introduced
into the senior seminar for which students prepare resumes, curriculum vitae,
and cover letters in French, participate in mock interviews in English, and
research (and in some instances even apply for) jobs using their French skills.
These
are recent initiatives whose efficacy will be assessed.
8.
Possible forms for future assessment
At
the present time, only language proficiency is assessed systematically.
However, nearly all of the advanced courses in the curriculum have a cultural
focus, which is also a signficant component of the first and second year
courses. The discipline will be discussing whether and how to assess the
acquisition of cultural knowledge.
General
education categories spanned by the discipline
Almost
all French courses bear one of the following general education designators: FL,
foreign language; IP, international perspective; Hum, communication, language,
literature, and philosophy; or Hist, historical perspectives. Directed study
and senior seminar carry no general education designator.
[1] The numbers are in the economics discipline report in
the appendices.
[2] Education is the fourth academic division at UMM.
[3] See Table One of the Education disciplineÕs report in
the appendices. This table also summarizes results for all three assessment
tools for the class of 2007.
[4] Table II in the discipline report.
[5] The paragraphs in ¤ 5-7 have been pasted almost
entirely from the Education discipline report in the appendices.
[6] The complete assessment report is in the appendices.
[7] The discipline report in the appendices gives numerical
details of assessment in one eighteen-student section of college writing.
[8] Ibid.
[9] These are abridged from the full text in the
appendices.
[10] The appendices contain numerical results for sections
from 2005 and 2007.
[11] The discipline report discusses qualitatively the
strengths and weaknesses of these bibliographies.
[12] Results for the 2006-2007 academic year are in the
French discipline report that is in the appendices.
[13] See appendices for detailed results. For writing
proficiency, senior seminar students ranged from advanced-high to
intermediate-high. For oral proficiency, the same group ranged from
advanced-high to intermediate-mid. The author of the report in the appendices
notes that Òstudy abroad is not a reliable predictor of higher levels of proficiency
in writing,Ó but cautions that the sample size is small. The predictive power
of study abroad is better for oral proficiency, but not clear-cut.