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Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

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Page 1: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Assessment

David Kniola, Ph.D.

Assistant Director

Office of Academic Assessment

Page 2: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment
Page 3: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=6Cf7IL_eZ38&vq=medium

Page 4: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Rising tension within and between Internal and External

Page 5: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Where might we be headed?

Page 6: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Within the next 2-3 years

Continue current practices. • LEAP essential learning outcomes and authentic assessment. • New Leadership Alliance (http://www.newleadershipalliance.org/)

 

Shift from quantitative to a balance with qualitative measures. LEAP report from employers wanting “context and substance.”

Page 7: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Within the next 2-3 years

Keeping eye on emerging trends:

• Discerning Learning from Lumina (http://www.luminafoundation.org/publications/)

• Degree Qualifications Profile (http://www.luminafoundation.org/publications/The_Degree_Qualifications_Profile.pdf)

• ETS e-rater, automated essay evaluation (http://www.ets.org/erater/about)

• Targeted analytics defined by NRC doctoral program survey

Page 8: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

National Institute for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA) http://www.learningoutcomeassessment.org/TransparencyFrameworkIntro.htm

Transparency Framework

Page 9: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Diana Chapman Walsh who served as president of Wellesley College from 1993 to 2007. Essay in Inside HE:

• Toward a Science of Learning• Advances in learning sciences and fast-changing technology• Transcending new and better measures of SLOs• Assessing WHAT students have learned is less valuable than finding

out HOW they learn.• Polanyi’s "Learning about" involves explicit knowledge, "learning to

be" is more tacit…combine with “socially constructed understanding” in digital age

Transformation in Assessment

Page 10: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Define higher education and learning in traditional university. Walsh calls for a “science of improvement.” Creation of “highly intentional learning”

• What is quality?• What is “value added?”• Do we need improvement in educational output?• We have seen quality of life improvements (res halls, dining, fitness

center). These have not led to educational improvements.• What is the role of land-grant?• What do these mean to VT? How do we invent our future?• Data, honest conversation, systematic research.

Transformation in Assessment

Page 11: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Analytics

Page 12: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Rise of learning and business analytics

• How do we know if a student is struggling?• Do we know what makes a student successful?• What data do we have?• What data do we need?

Learning Analytics

Page 13: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Learning analytics:• Utilizing performance data (grades, quizzes, tests) captured by

LMS.• Purdue Signals (http://www.itap.purdue.edu/tlt/signals/)

…but what if this data was augmented with data from “outside” the LMS?

What if we could see patterns of data that has been captured at every interaction a student has with the university?

What if this could then be used by faculty as well as students to better understand learning?

Learning Analytics

Page 14: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Learning Analytics

Assessment

Identify Risks Intervention

Identify Learning

Awareness and growth

Page 15: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Within the next 5-10 years

• Convergence of data sources (implementation of learning analytics)

• Portable and personalized assessment tools. Student or professor can deploy bot to retrieve data. Call up on mobile device. Where does student fit in relation to others?

• Modeling ontologies? Simulations?

• Networked assessment. Move from department/discipline to university wide. Include PK-12? A social network for assessment?

• Is privacy an issue for the Facebook generation?

Page 16: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Within the next 15 years

Page 17: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Within the next 15 years

Artificial intelligence and augmented intelligence

• Assessment hinges on how we define learning? • Computers readily retrieve “answers” (e.g., Watson, which will

be commercialized by IBM). • Human capabilities enhanced by interaction with computer (e.g.,

pattern recognition, devices as extension of our senses, decisions based on data)

• Asking questions (humans) not answering them (computers)

Page 18: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Within the next 15 years

Where does that leave assessment? Possibility to explore deeper questions about student learning.

If learning is individualized, assessment will need to be.

Different questions important to different users:

• Faculty—how/what are students learning in my class?• Advisors—which students need attention and guidance?• Students—what am I learning and how do I compare to others?• Administrators—where do we need to focus resources to support

learning?• Public—are they doing what they say they are doing?

Page 19: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Within the next 15 years

Next Generation Learning Challenges (http://nextgenlearning.org/)

Goal: Scale the real-time use of learning analytics by students, instructors, and academic advisors to improve student success.

 

“That’s our challenge to you: Develop a model that identifies, improves, and scales existing solutions of learner analytics.”

 

 

Page 20: Assessment David Kniola, Ph.D. Assistant Director Office of Academic Assessment

Within the next 15 years

Think back to the Corning video.

• Imagine this as a university campus.

• Imagine this is what we could do with our data.

• Can we build this at VT?

• An interdisciplinary “meeting of the minds”: instructional design, learning technologies, brain science, education, psychology, computer science, systems engineering, OAA, CIDER, others…