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Learning Outcomes

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5 Minute Exercise ... American Association for Higher Education. www.aahe.org ... Student Services Council. Researcher. Reference Librarian. G. Conclusion ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Learning Outcomes


1
Learning Outcomes
  • Staff Development Day
  • February 2003
  • Gavilan Community College

2
Expected Outcomes
  • Describe learning outcomes
  • Explain why we must attend to learning outcomes
  • List and compare assessment methods
  • Outline Gavilans approach
  • Create a learning outcome
  • Identify resources for further research
  • Submit to the will of WASC

3
  • This is a subliminal message to promote
  • Bike To Work and School Day
  • on
  • May 15th
  • Pedal Peace, not war

4
Perspective
  • In the past, year-end reports demonstrated proper
    management but not whether the programs directly
    aided student learning
  • Colleges measured enrollments, participation
    rates, budget expenditures
  • More recently have expanded to measure success,
    retention, persistence, graduation, and transfer
  • Focus has also been on instructional delivery
    versus student learning
  • Means have been mistaken for the ends
    (Barr Tagg 1995)
  • Learning outcomes now required by WASC

5
What are Learning Outcomes?
  • Learning outcomes not a new concept
  • Used in California in K-12 and vocational
    programs
  • Used in other college systems (i.e. Maryland,
    England)
  • Barr and Tagg called for learning outcomes in
    1995
  • Focuses on what and how much students learn not
    on how we instruct or support them outcome based
  • Emphasis on higher more complex level of learning
  • Clearly states educational intentions for students

6
Sounds like behavioral objectives!
  • Learning outcomes differ from behavioral
    objectives by
  • Being broadly stated
  • Having instructors assess gains in skills rather
    than creating detailed list of specific topics
    and abilities to be mastered (Harden 2002)
  • Some authors do not perceive that the difference
    between learning outcomes and behavioral
    objectives is important (Prideaux 2000)

7
  • The definition of insanity is doing the same
    thing over and over again and expecting different
    results so if at first you dont succeed try, try
    again

8
New Perspective
  • Shift from instruction as core of the college
    towards learning as central focus
  • Potentially lessens threat to faculty by shifting
    focus of evaluation from teaching to learning
  • We must treat the college as a learning
    laboratory John Baker, VP SS Gavilan
  • Some areas may be easier to evaluate than others
    such as Vocational programs
  • Many Student Services will be more difficult to
    assess

9
Levels of Analysis
  • Institutional
  • Department or Program
  • Class or Service
  • Assignment or Student Interaction

10
Gavilan Institutional Learning Outcomes
  • Communication
  • Cognition
  • Information Competency
  • Social Interactions
  • Aesthetic Responsiveness
  • Personal Development and Responsibility

11
Gavilan Institutional Learning Outcomes
  • Communication
  • Listening
  • Reading
  • Writing

12
Gavilan Instutional Learning Outcomes
  • Cognition
  • Analysis Synthesis
  • Problem Solving
  • Creative Thinking
  • Quantitative Reasoning
  • Transfer of Knowledge Skills to a New Context

13
Gavilan Instutional Learning Outcomes
  • Information Competency
  • Research
  • Technological

14
Gavilan Instutional Learning Outcomes
  • Social Interaction
  • Teamwork
  • Effective Citizenship

15
Gavilan Instutional Learning Outcomes
  • Aesthetic Responsiveness
  • Differentiate between people who can sing and
    people who cant
  • e.g. Brittney Spears vs. Norah Jones
  • Distinguish between art that offends you, art
    that is cheesy, art you cant understand, and art
    that is too expensive

16
Gavilan Instutional Learning Outcomes
  • Personal Development and Responsibility
  • Students will develop individual responsibility,
    personal integrity, and respect for diverse
    people and cultures
  • Self-management Students will demonstrate habits
    of intellectual exploration, personal
    responsibility and physical well being
  • Ethics and Values Students will demonstrate an
    understanding of ethical issues that will enhance
    their capacity for making sound judgments and
    decisions
  • Respect for Diverse People and Cultures Students
    will respect and work with diverse people
    including those with different cultural and
    linguistic backgrounds and different abilities

17
Learning Outcome Example Introduction to
Statistics
18
(No Transcript)
19
Assessment Considerations
  • Assessment has a role but is not an end in itself
  • Assessments must feed back into practices
  • All data collection must be preceded with
    consideration of how it will be analyzed and how
    well it can answer the question of service
    efficacy and desired learning outcomes
  • Collect a few well-chosen pieces of evidence
    rather than obtaining all possible data

20
Data Considerations
  • Quantitative and Qualitative
  • Direct and Indirect
  • As students are exposed to many influences on
    learning, separating the effects of a service
    from other factors proves difficult
  • How long does it take for learning to manifest
    itself in observable behavior? Must assess in
    many places and stages.
  • Not everything that can be counted counts and not
    everything that counts can be counted -Einstein

21
(No Transcript)
22
Common Assessment Methods
  • Tests
  • Locally developed or Standardized
  • Performances
  • Recital, Presentation, or Demonstration
  • Cumulative
  • Portfolios, Capstone Projects
  • Surveys
  • Attitudes and perceptions of students, staff,
    employers
  • Database Tracked Academic Behavior
  • Grades, Graduation, Lab Usage, Persistence
  • Narrative
  • Staff and student journals, essays, and
    interviews
  • Embedded Assessment
  • Using grading process to measure ILO

23
Embedded Assessment Example
Down for grades, across for outcomes assessment
after Nichols
24
Assessment Strategies
  • Track outcomes for every student all the time
  • Randomly select a set of classes to assess once
    per year

25
Gavilans Approach
  • Educational Master Plan calls for each department
    to identify learning outcomes for at least one
    course
  • Student Services held a retreat to address the
    application of learning outcomes
  • Instruction is revising selected course outlines
    to include learning outcomes
  • Next step is to develop more comprehensive and
    formalized communication among departments and
    between Student Service and Instructional
    divisions
  • What is learned needs to be systemically
    integrated into ongoing services and evaluation

26
Teamwork
  • The task of evidence compilation is an
    institutional responsibility and must be
    distributed across the institution
  • There is no I in team but there is a me if
    you take out the a and switch the m and the
    e

27
Writing Learning Outcomes
  • Should be based on our Mission
  • In an environment that nurtures creativity and
    intellectual curiosity, Gavilan College serves
    the community by providing a high quality
    learning experience which prepares students for
    transfer, technical and public service careers,
    life-long learning, and participation in a
    diverse global society

28
Writing Learning Outcomes
  • and our Values
  • Value 1 We value excellence in and promotion of
    comprehensive programs, services, and activities.
  • Because we value excellence, our objective is to
    develop learning outcomes and measures at the
    services and program level.
  • The measure we will use to determine whether we
    have met our objective is that students will
    demonstrate their learning in all programs
    according to institutional learning outcomes.

From Harriett Robles
29
Writing Learning Outcomes
  • Outcomes must be observable so you can measure or
    record them
  • Could be quantitative
  • Play all major scales in eighth notes at 120
    beats per minute (comm, cog, aesthetic
    responsiveness)
  • Or not
  • Compose in sonata-allegro form (comm, cog, info
    comp, aesthetic responsiveness)
  • Accurately complete a FAFSA (comm, cog)
  • Course level learning outcomes sound like
    behavioral objectives (or really are the same)
    but LO tie into institutional learning outcomes

30
Writing Learning Outcomes
  • Good verbs (Blooms Taxonomy)
  • Compile Arrange Classify
  • Analyze Identify Operate
  • Design Solve Write
  • Apply Differentiate Calculate
  • Demonstrate Formulate Compose
  • Explain Predict Assess
  • Compare Estimate Critique
  • Bad verbs
  • Know Understand Appreciate Learn
  • Good verbs are clear and observable, bad verbs
    are vague states of mind

31
Your Turn! 5 Minute Exercise
  • Gather into groups with people you already know
    so you dont have to spend time asking their name
  • Write 2 learning outcomes for a class and 2 for a
    service
  • Some of you will be randomly selected to share
    your outcomes

32
5 minute exercise suggestions
33
Institutional Concerns
  • Another education fad that will invoke hypnotic
    tendrils of smoke and little flame
  • Sounds kindergarten
  • Students have a fundamental right to services and
    if these services are not or cannot be related to
    learning outcomes, their existence could be
    unfairly jeopardized (Collins 2002)
  • Uncritical application of business models and
    concepts to education
  • Fear all this measuring will be a waste of effort
    and not enhance student achievement Luna,
    Gavilan College Academic Senate
  • Do students really care about learning? Borden

34
Learning Outcome Resources
  • Authors
  • Trudy Banta
  • Patricia Cross
  • Thomas Angelo
  • James Nichols
  • Victor Bordon

35
Learning Outcome Resources
  • WASC
  • www.wasc.org
  • American Association for Higher Education
  • www.aahe.org/teaching/portfolio_db.htm
  • Palomar College
  • www.palomar.edu/alp/
  • Novia Scotia Community College
  • www.nscc.ns.ca/studentportfolio
  • Cascadia Community College
  • www.cascadia.ctc.edu/LearningForTheFuture/vanguard
    .asp
  • Raymond Walters College
  • www.rwc.uc.edu/phillips/index_assess.html
  • Alverno Colleg
  • www.alverno.edu
  • Gavilan College Curriculum and Research
  • www.gavilan.edu/curriculum
  • www.gavilan.edu/research

36
Learning Outcome Resources
  • Curriculum Committee
  • Academic Senate
  • Student Services Council
  • Researcher
  • Reference Librarian

37
Conclusion
  • The learning outcomes challenge can be another
    opportunity to improve our efforts and to better
    integrate with instruction
  • We must take control of the learning outcomes
    mandate and create a process that benefits our
    students
  • We must work together
  • Learning outcomes is a plot concocted by Texas
    CEOs to distract us from the budget crisis

38
Acknowledgements
  • Gavilan Student Services Division
  • John Baker
  • Margery Regalado
  • Gavilan Instructional Division
  • Marty Johnson
  • Marlene Dwyer her Curriculum Committee
  • Department Chairs
  • Academic Senate, Enrique Luna
  • Research and Planning Group
  • Harriett Robles, Brad Philips, Fred Trapp
  • WASC
  • Darlene Pacheco, Barbara Beno

39
Riddle
  • Made from sheets
  • Not meant for sleep
  • It's bound to make you think
  • With stories of smearing ink

40
Thank You
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