Title: Mind the Gap: Overview of FSSE and BCSSE
1Mind the Gap Overview of FSSE and BCSSE
2The family of NSSE surveys
- FSSE emerged from the field as a tool to
promote faculty reflection on student engagement - BCSSE obvious pre-test to NSSE can we measure
what the institution contributes to student
engagement, or value-added? - LSSSE Law School Survey
3Rejected essies
- Student Affairs Survey of Student Engagement
(sassy!) - Administrator Survey of Student Engagement
(!_at_) - Medical School Survey of Student Engagement
(messy!) - Graduate School Survey of Student Engagement
- ..We are focused on UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION.
Surveys grounded in body of research on
undergraduate student learning and development.
4Faculty Survey of Student Engagement
(pronounced fessie)
- FSSE measures faculty expectations and
activities related to student engagement in
effective educational practices
5FSSE and NSSE Point to Disorienting Dilemmas
- Situations in which usual perspectives or ways
of responding do not work or dont fit are more
likely to motivate us to learn and change
(Mezirow, 1990)
6Faculty Priorities and Student Engagement
7Faculty Priorities and Selected Student Outcomes
8What to make of this?
- When faculty members emphasize certain
educational practices, students engage in them to
a greater extent than their peers elsewhere. - Good things go together
9Deep Learning Sub-ScaleIntegrative Learning
- Worked on a paper or project that required
integrating ideas or information from various
sources - Included diverse perspectives (different races,
religions, genders, political beliefs, etc.) in
class discussions or writing assignments - Put together ideas or concepts from different
courses when completing assignments or during
class discussions - Discussed ideas from your readings or classes
with faculty members outside of class - Discussed ideas from your readings or classes
with others outside of class (students, family
members, co-workers, etc.)
10Disciplinary ComparisonsIntegrative Learning
11BCSSE
- How much do students background characteristics
affect NSSE scores? - Are institutions benchmark scores the result of
good practices or good recruitment? - Pilot 04, 05,06
12BCSSE
- BCSSE measures
- HS experiences Importance of college activities
- Baseline self-assessment of knowledge and skills
- Demographics
- Use to examine gap between expectations and
engagement - Study effect of students background on NSSE
scores
13Focus on First-year students Expectations for
Engagement
- High importance
- Asking questions
- Come to class with readings/assignments completed
- Discuss grades/assignmt with faculty
- Talk about career plans
- Feedback on performance
- Work hard
- Learn something that changes way you understand
issue - Low or mixed importance
- Make class presentation
- Work with peers in AND out of class
- Tutor peers
- Service learning
- Work with faculty on activities other than
coursework - Discuss ideas with others, and also faculty
outside of class
- Important NSSEville emphasis
- Spend significant amount of time studying
- Provides support to succeed academically
- Encouraging contact among students from different
economic, social, racial-ethnic backgrounds - Less important NSSEville emphasis
- Helping students cope with non-academic
responsibilities - Provide support to thrive socially
- Using computers in academic work
14Mind the Gap FY expectations and engagement
- Match value to engagement
- Ask questions in class
- Prepare 2 drafts
- Work on integrated paper
- Include diverse perspectives
- Work with peers out of class
- Put together different ideas
- Tutor peers
- Service learning
- Used email
- Discuss ideas with faculty
- Receive feedback
- Discuss ideas with others
- Serious conversation race-ethnicity
- Serious conversation beliefs
- Better understand diff POV
- Learn something change view on issue
High value- High engagement - Low value
Low engagement
- Students who do not value activity are less
motivated to participate in it in college. - How to re-shape student values concerning
activity?
15Mind the Gap FY expectations and engagement
- Mixed value Low engagement
- Class presentation
- Work with peers in class
- Work with faculty on activities
- High value Mixed engagement
- Discussed grades
- Talk about career plans
- Work hard
- Examine strength of views
- Activity is valued, but students dont do it
much Is sometimes an acceptable response?
- College providing students with fewer experiences
than they anticipated
16Mind the Gap FY expectations and engagement
- Time Gaps
- 45 entering students expect to spend 20 hrs per
week studying, but only 30 actually spent this
much time studying - FY spent less time in co-curriculars (avg. 5 hrs
per week) than they expected (avg. 11 hrs per
week) - Estimates for working were slightly higher
relaxing socializing about what they expected
17Patterns in FY NSSE Results 2004-2006
- Student Faculty Interaction
- FY have less interaction with faculty outside
class - Enriching Experiences
- Some flux over the years.
- Plan to do an internship
- Study abroad (71 plan to do in 2005 63 in
2006) - More emphasis on attending campus events
- FY students plans match what Seniors report in
terms of Enriching Experiences - 51 FY plan to do research with faculty 52
seniors do
- Diversity Experiences
- Slightly more FY report conversations with
students of different race-ethnicity - More FY SR perceive an institutional emphasis
on encouraging contact among students from
different economic, social and racial-ethnic
backgrounds - More FY report gains in understanding people of
other racial-ethnic backgrounds