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This contributed volume explores institutional and programmatic
policies and practices which actively engage students as partners
in improving student learning. This entails an examination of the
degree to which students are partners in the assessment and
learning processes and the characteristics of these partnerships.
This volume showcases student partnerships, as well as presents a
history of institutional culture affecting student learning, the
role of students in teaching and learning, and brings student
voices and perspectives to bare through research from a variety of
institutional types. Case studies, current programs and activities,
and a model for culturally-responsive assessment are highlighted to
better understand student-focused learning and assessment.
Implications for faculty, staff, and administrators are questioned.
Overall, this volume links research to practice, and offers
faculty, practitioners, and administrators different forms and
methods of including students, while keeping issues of equity in
mind.
This book makes the case for assessment of student learning as a
vehicle for equity in higher education. The book proceeds through a
framework of "why, what, how, and now what." The opening chapters
present the case for infusing equity into assessment, arguing that
assessment professionals can and should be activists in advancing
equity, given the historic and systemic use of assessment as an
impediment to the educational access and attainment of historically
marginalized populations. The "what" chapters offer definitions of
emerging terms, discuss the narratives of equity in evidence of
student learning, present models and approaches to promoting
equity, and explore the relationship between knowledge systems and
assessment practice. The "how" chapters begin by progressively
moving from the classroom to the program, then beyond the program
level to share examples from student affairs. Subsequent chapters
address the problem of equitable access to STEM fields; culturally
responsive practices within the context of community colleges; the
ongoing work of culturally situated assessment practices in
Historically Black Colleges and Universities; and the role of
technology-enabled assessment as a possible tool for equitable
assessment. The final two chapters in the book address the "now
what", providing a way for assessment professional to develop
individual awareness within their practice as a next step in the
equity journey, and a conceptual framework to anchor equity in
their work.
This book makes the case for assessment of student learning as a
vehicle for equity in higher education. The book proceeds through a
framework of "why, what, how, and now what." The opening chapters
present the case for infusing equity into assessment, arguing that
assessment professionals can and should be activists in advancing
equity, given the historic and systemic use of assessment as an
impediment to the educational access and attainment of historically
marginalized populations. The "what" chapters offer definitions of
emerging terms, discuss the narratives of equity in evidence of
student learning, present models and approaches to promoting
equity, and explore the relationship between knowledge systems and
assessment practice. The "how" chapters begin by progressively
moving from the classroom to the program, then beyond the program
level to share examples from student affairs. Subsequent chapters
address the problem of equitable access to STEM fields; culturally
responsive practices within the context of community colleges; the
ongoing work of culturally situated assessment practices in
Historically Black Colleges and Universities; and the role of
technology-enabled assessment as a possible tool for equitable
assessment. The final two chapters in the book address the "now
what", providing a way for assessment professional to develop
individual awareness within their practice as a next step in the
equity journey, and a conceptual framework to anchor equity in
their work.
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