Thursday, October 15, 2009

Get It out of the Way? . . . No Way!


Even though the whole college—business majors, nursing students, and pre-service teachers included—has some interest in the structure and content of general education requirements, these groups see it as something to “get out of the way.” As Tim Clydesdale’s The First Year Out so clearly states, for students the value of their college education is a narrow career objective with a $$ attached.

We in Arts and Sciences see things differently. For us, the ones charged with packaging and delivering the wisdom of millenia (hence Athena, Goddess of Wisdom, pictured here) and critical life skills in communication, numeracy, teamwork, and critical thinking, the Core Curriculum is the way, second only to “The Way” in John 14:6.

Because of our vested interest, we owe it to our disciplines, our college, and our students to do the Core with all the passion and energy we can muster. And, of course, we must measure what we are doing with precision and scrutinize our collected data with perspicacity.

The MEETING coming up on Monday, October 19, for all Core teachers is important. It will lay out our course-embedded assessment plan for 2009-2010. It will remind us what data we need to collect and which IDEA objectives to mark for each course being taught for Core Curriculum credit this semester.

The plan was laid out in the re-imagined course proposals that came to the Ad Hoc Core Curriculum Revision Committee. However, the measures and methods may not be as familiar to the “boots-on-the-ground” classroom teachers as they were to the course designers. Hence this meeting.

IDEA Course Evaluations

Last year we pre-marked the IDEA Course Evaluations for Core classes, but some teachers really felt constrained by the fact that they could not measure distinctive features of their particular courses. So, this fall we are counting on teaching faculty to mark the objectives “Essential” that are designated on the course proposals, AND allowing each teacher to mark other objectives of his/her choice up to a total of five as either “Essential” or “Important.”

Course-embedded Measures

Just as we hope our students will embrace not only their Core Curriculum assignments but also the values and understandings those assignments can foster, we must undertake assessment with zeal. This year that means doing course-embedded assessment well.

CBASE

We will be continuing to use the CBASE; however, we are not giving it in 2009-2010. In the future we will give it to seniors as a part of KING 4000 to see if (as the SACS standard stipulates…) our graduates, four-year King students and transfers alike, do possess the five competencies we say our Core accomplishes. The students who are seniors this year took CBASE in the fall of 2008, so we will not be testing them again in 2009-2010.

This year the burden of assessing the New Core rests on each person teaching, and all but two are in the School of Arts and Sciences. Good assessment practice is one way we will get to keep on doing the job we love. Let’s not treat it as something to get out of the way.

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