|
 |
Off the Shelf
A National Dialogue: The Secretary of
Education's Commission on the Future of Higher Education
By: David G. Martin, Ph.D.
Dean, College of Business Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania
The recent report of "The
Secretary of Education's Commission on the Future of Higher Education"
included recommendations regarding assessment activities for
Universities and Colleges. First,
the Commission recommended Colleges demonstrate that their programs are
producing intended results. The
second recommendation was that performance measures produced by the
Colleges be transparent and comparable. The third recommendation was that these performance measures be
publicly reported. And,
fourth, those measures of value-added assessment such as the College
Learning Assessment or the Measure
of Academic Proficiency and Progress MAPPTM
are used to demonstrate efficacy of general education programs
especially for skills testing. In
addition, the Commission also called on accreditors to publicly report
on institution’s performances.
While
some of these recommendations are easily accomplished, the value of the
recommendations must be studied to ascertain which will achieve desired
results. For example, most
Colleges are already moving on assessing learning goals for students
many of which are skill rather than knowledge based. However, these assessments have been institutionally directed and
generated and thus, are not comparable across institutions in any
meaningful manner. To
create a common set of comparable measures to capture institutional
performance will be a Herculean task and may well be impossible.
For
example, if we measure "critical thinking" using MAPPTM
and achieve poor results initially we must ask, how can we
change those results? One
method would simply be to improve the quality of the raw material
(better students) to improve the results. Does this mean that the institution is better simply because it
can demonstrate better results? This leads to a fundamental question:
how do we capture the efficacy of institutional changes?
The
same problems exist for any value-added examinations. While there may be a legitimate internal function for such tests,
the validity of them to measure institutional effectiveness is dubious
since the test itself does not control for many important variables such
as the quality of incoming students, campus culture, and accountability
(i.e. where is critical thinking really taught in the curriculum and who
has responsibility for it?).
Regardless
of concerns for the ability of institutions to implement the
recommendations of the Commission, there can be no disagreement that the
report will drive a robust public discussion on how best to achieve the
result of improving student learning and it is clear that Colleges must
be prepared to answer critics who believe that we are not teaching
students.
Link
to, the Commission on the Future of Higher Education
final report:
|