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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.
Concerned by ongoing debates about higher education that talk past
one another, the authors of this book show how to move beyond these
and other obstacles to improve the student learning experience and
further successful college outcomes. Offering an alternative to the
culture of compliance in assessment and accreditation, they propose
a different approach which they call the Learning System Paradigm.
Building on the shift in focus from teaching to learning, the new
paradigm encourages faculty and staff to systematically seek out
information on how well students are learning and how well various
areas of the institution are supporting the student experience, and
to use that information to create more coherent and explicit
learning experiences for students. The authors begin by surveying
the crowded terrain of reform in higher education, and proceed from
there to explore the emergence of this alternative paradigm that
brings all these efforts together in a coherent way. The Learning
System Paradigm presented in chapter two includes four key
elementsaEURO"consensus, alignment, student-centeredness,and
communication. Chapter three focuses upon developing an
encompassing notion of alignment that enables faculty, staff, and
administrators to reshape institutional practice in ways that
promote synergistic, integrative learning. Chapters four and five
turn to practice, exploring the application of the paradigm to the
work of curriculum mapping and assignment design. Chapter six
focuses upon barriers to the work and presents ways to start and
options for moving around barriers, and the final chapter explores
ongoing implications of the new paradigm, offering strategies for
communicating the impact of alignment on student learning. The book
draws upon two recent initiatives in the United States: the Tuning
process, adapted from a European approach to breaking down siloes
in the European Union educational space, and the Degree
Qualifications Profile (DQP), a document that identifies and
describes core areas of learning that are common to institutions in
the US. Many of the examples are drawn from site visit reports,
self-reported activities, workshops, and project experience
collected by the National Institute for Learning Outcomes
Assessment (NILOA) between 2010 and 2016. In that six-year window,
NILOA witnessed the use of Tuning and/or the DQP in hundreds of
institutions across the nation. Sponsored by the National Institute
for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA)
Concerned by ongoing debates about higher education that talk past
one another, the authors of this book show how to move beyond these
and other obstacles to improve the student learning experience and
further successful college outcomes. Offering an alternative to the
culture of compliance in assessment and accreditation, they propose
a different approach which they call the Learning System Paradigm.
Building on the shift in focus from teaching to learning, the new
paradigm encourages faculty and staff to systematically seek out
information on how well students are learning and how well various
areas of the institution are supporting the student experience, and
to use that information to create more coherent and explicit
learning experiences for students. The authors begin by surveying
the crowded terrain of reform in higher education, and proceed from
there to explore the emergence of this alternative paradigm that
brings all these efforts together in a coherent way. The Learning
System Paradigm presented in chapter two includes four key
elements—consensus, alignment, student-centeredness,and
communication. Chapter three focuses upon developing an
encompassing notion of alignment that enables faculty, staff, and
administrators to reshape institutional practice in ways that
promote synergistic, integrative learning. Chapters four and five
turn to practice, exploring the application of the paradigm to the
work of curriculum mapping and assignment design. Chapter six
focuses upon barriers to the work and presents ways to start and
options for moving around barriers, and the final chapter explores
ongoing implications of the new paradigm, offering strategies for
communicating the impact of alignment on student learning. The book
draws upon two recent initiatives in the United States: the Tuning
process, adapted from a European approach to breaking down siloes
in the European Union educational space, and the Degree
Qualifications Profile (DQP), a document that identifies and
describes core areas of learning that are common to institutions in
the US. Many of the examples are drawn from site visit reports,
self-reported activities, workshops, and project experience
collected by the National Institute for Learning Outcomes
Assessment (NILOA) between 2010 and 2016. In that six-year window,
NILOA witnessed the use of Tuning and/or the DQP in hundreds of
institutions across the nation. Sponsored by the National Institute
for Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA)
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