Part 3: Genres of Assessment

Like all grand concepts, “assessment” is really an umbrella for a broad range of different methodologies and approaches. These include, but are not limited to, “classroom assessment,” “direct assessment,” “embedded assessment,” “formative assessment,” “indirect assessment,” “non-referenced assessment,” “qualitative assessment,” “summative assessment,” and others. For those interested in exploring the rich vocabulary of assessment methods, there are plenty of guides and websites. But to be good at assessment we need not be overly preoccupied with such detailed schema. For now, we might focus on four distinct realms or genres of assessment.

I. Classroom Assessment

 

This is when individual faculty reflect on what and how their students learn in specific courses. Classroom assessment is focused on course improvement and is less preoccupied with giving grades. Obviously this doesn’t mean that faculty concerned with classroom assessment don’t give grades; it just means that faculty value dialogue with their students, exploring with them ways of enhancing the course. This can include focus groups, one-on-one and small group conferences, surveys, collecting student evaluations, and assigning and reflecting upon student writing. It also means faculty being in dialogue with their peers, sharing teaching methods and best practices with colleagues in meetings and retreats while keeping abreast of pedagogically relevant literature in the field. Certainly many faculty already engage in such activities—which illustrates the degree to which assessment has always been a part of our professional work. What’s different now is the need for faculty to document such assessment and how it translates into enhanced teaching and learning. Here at St. John’s, this means uploading data into WEAVE and assessing students’ accomplishments via their electronic portfolios and other means (more on these below).

 

II. Program Assessment

 

Just as individual faculty assess their own courses, so too do departments need to annually reflect upon their programs. Every year representatives from every academic program need to upload ongoing assessment findings from their department or unit into WEAVE, and also document what they are doing next in response to that assessment. In this manner a program is continually reflecting upon its strengths as well as areas it has identified for development and review.

 

III. Licensure and Examination Passing Rates

 

For some professions, a major form of assessment takes place in licensure and exam passing rates. A law school, for example, is evaluated to a large extent on how well its students perform on the bar exam. All departments that seek to prepare students for certain licensing or certification exams—and, thus, base their own effectiveness in part on how well their students do on such exams--need to continually compare their students’ success with  benchmark institutions, establish targets, and develop action plans to increase or sustain performance. Summaries of this work are archived annually into WEAVE.

 

IV. Job Placement and Further Education

 

Are our students getting jobs related to their areas of study? Are they getting into graduate programs? Are they winning awards, or demonstrating other evidence of success? Departments are often the first places that learn of their students’ ability to land jobs or get into graduate programs. Departments need to keep records of where their majors, minors, and graduate students are establishing their careers or gaining admittance into other graduate programs. Such information should be regularly posted within the Department’s website.

 
Our goals:

  • Understand some of the various ways assessment happens in response to the local needs of departments and programs.
  •  Appreciate the need to continually document assessment findings, as well as resultant action plans.