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RCTC Student Learning Assessment
Glossary
Assessment of Student
Learning
The process of gathering and discussing information
from multiple and diverse sources in order to develop
a deep understanding of what students know, understand,
and can do with their knowledge as a result of their
educational experiences; the process culminates when
assessment results are used to improve subsequent
learning (Huba & Freed, 2000).
Statements describing intentions about what
students should know, understand, and be able to do
with their knowledge when they graduate (Huba &
Freed, 2000).
- Direct Assessment (Huba & Freed, 2000)
Students demonstrate what they know or can do
with their knowledge.
Direct assessments may include a:
-
Project
students complete an assignment over a prolonged
period of time. To be successful, students must set goals,
plan, use resources, organize, make judgements,
and craft a written and/or visual presentation of
material.
-
Performance
students prepare and present a performance of
a valued activity.
-
Case
Study students are given a realistic example of
an application in their field.
They respond with an analysis using information
and skills they have acquired.
-
Exhibition
a project, product, or performance that is presented
to judges and defended or debated with them.
-
Clinical
evaluation students perform a professional service
in a real-life setting.
-
Oral
Exam - students
answer spontaneous questions put to them by experts.
-
Comprehensive
exam students complete a time-limited essay test
that requires them to organize and present central
ideas, facts, and concepts in response to questions.
-
Portfolio
students gather examples of their work to include
in a portfolio. They write about aspects of their learning
and achievement and include their written reflections
in the portfolio.
A self-report measure that supplements and enriches a direct measure.
Indirect measures can be used at the course,
department/program, division or institutional level. Examples include surveys, self-evaluations,
exit interviews, focus groups, transfer rates, and
job placement data. (Milwaukee Area Technical College)
-
Rubrics
a set of scoring guidelines that can be used to
evaluate students work. (DuPage)
A process of administrative review and consultation
with faculty concerning performance in the faculty
role. The feedback
and insights developed through student learning assessments
are not an appropriate foundation for faculty evaluation
(DuPage)
-
eLumen Software
-
Achievement
Area – a broad category that contains similar
defined achievements.
-
Judgement Criteria – Magnitude
Scale, Rubric, Standard of Evidence, Conditions
-
Standard
of Evidence – a scale describing the level
of reliability/validity of the evaluation method:
jointly developed rubric vs
individually developed rubric.
-
General
Achievement – a defined learning outcome.
-
Assessed
Effort – is an achievement linked to a small
student activity that is done once or for a short
period of time: an assignment, test, project, event.
-
Substantial
Accomplishment – is an achievement demonstrated
as a comprehensive culmination of, or over the length
of, an entire course.
-
Broad
Ability – a demonstrated achievement that
spans the length of several years or an entire academic
program.
-
Planned
Assessment – student activities to be evaluated
using the eLumen software
Huba,
M.E.
& Freed, J. E.
(2000). Learner-centered assessment on college
campuses. Shifting
the focus from teaching to learning.
Needham Heights, MA:
Allyn & Bacon.
College
of DuPage.
(2000). Assessment
An Institution-Wide Process to Improve and Support
Student Learning. Glen
Ellyn, IL.
Milwaukee
Area
Technical
College
(August 2000). Milwaukee
Area Technical College Student Outcomes Assess Plan
UPDATE. Milwaukee,
Wisconsin.
eLumen 2.1 User Documentation.
(December 2004).
Updated June, 2005 |