All assessment activities at UCCS are guided by the following 9 Principles of Good Practice for Assessing Student Learning published by the American Association for Higher Education (AAHE).
The assessment of student learning begins with educational values.
Assessment is not an end in itself but a vehicle for educational improvement. It’s effective
practice, then, begins with and enacts a vision of the kinds of learning we most value for students and
strive to help them achieve. Educational values should drive not only what we choose to assess but also
how we do so. Where questions about educational mission and values are skipped over, assessment
threatens to be an exercise in measuring what’s easy, rather than a process of improving what we
really care about.
Assessment is most effective when it reflects an understanding of learning as
multidimensional, integrated, and revealed in performance over time.
Learning is a complex process. It entails not only what students know but what they can do with what
they know; it involves not only knowledge and abilities but values, attitudes, and habits of mind that
affect both academic success and performance beyond the classroom. Assessment should reflect these
understandings by employing a diverse array of methods, including those that call for actual
performance, using them over time so as to reveal change, growth, and increasing degrees of
integration. Such an approach aims for a more complete and accurate picture of learning, and therefore
firmer bases for improving our students’ educational experience.
Assessment works best when the program it seeks to improve have clear,
explicitly stated purposes.
Assessment is a goal-oriented process. It entails comparing educational performance with educational
purposes and expectations- these derived from the institution’s mission, from faculty intentions
in program and course design, and from knowledge of students’ own goals. Where program purposes
lack specificity or agreement, assessment as a process pushes a campus toward clarity about where to
aim and what standards to apply; assessment also prompts attention to where and how program goals will
be taught and learned. Clear, shared, implementable goals are the cornerstones for assessment that is
focused and useful.
Assessment requires attention to outcomes but also and equally to the
experiences that leads to those outcomes.
Information about outcomes is of high importance; where students “end up” matters greatly.
But to improve outcomes, we need to know about student experience along the way- about the curricula,
teaching, and kind of student effort that lead to particular outcomes. Assessment can help us
understand which students learn best under what conditions; with such knowledge comes the capacity to
improved the whole of their learning.
Assessment works best when its ongoing, not episodic.
Assessment is a process whose power is cumulative. Though isolated “one-shot” assessment
can be better than none, improvement over time is best fostered when assessment entails a linked series
of cohorts of students; it may mean collecting the same examples of student performance or using the
same instrument semester after semester. The point is to monitor progress toward intended goals in a
spirit of continuous improvement. Along the way, the assessment proves itself should be evaluated and
refined in light of emerging insights.
Assessment fosters wider improvement when representatives from across the
educational community are involved.
Student learning is a campus-wide responsibility, and assessment is a way of enacting that
responsibility. Thus, while assessment efforts may start small, the aim over time is to involve people
from across the educational community. Faculty play an especially important role, but
assessment’s questions can’t be fully addressed without participation by student-affairs
educators, librarians, administrators, and students. Assessment may also involve individuals from
beyond the campus (i.e. alumni, trustees, employers) whose experience can enrich the sense of
appropriate aims and standards for learning. Thus understood, assessment is not a task for small groups
of experts but a collaborative activity; its aim is wider, better-informed attention to student
learning by all parties with a stake in its improvement.
Assessment makes a difference when it begins with issues of use and illuminates
questions that people really care about.
Assessment recognizes the value of information in the process of improvement. But to be useful,
information must be connected to issues or questions that people really care about. This implies that
assessment approaches that produce evidence that relevant parties will find credible, suggestive, and
applicable decisions that need to be made. It means thinking in advance about how the information will
be used, and by whom. The point of assessment is not to gather data and return “results”;
it is a process that starts with the questions of decision-makers, that involves them in the gathering
and interpreting of data, and that informs and helps guide continuous improvement.
Assessment is most likely to lead to improvement when it is a part of a larger
set of conditions that promote change.
Assessment alone changes little. Its greatest contribution comes on campuses where the quality of
teaching and learning is visibly valued and worked at. On such campuses, the push to improve
educational performance is a visible and primary goal of leadership; improving the quality of
undergraduate education is central to the institution’s planning, budgeting, and personnel
decisions. On such campuses, information about learning outcomes is seen as an integral part of
decision-making, and avidly sought.
Through assessment, educators meet responsibilities to students and to the
public.
There is a compelling public stake in education. As educators, we have a responsibility to the publics
that support or depend on us to provide information about the ways in which our students meet goals and
expectations. But that responsibility goes beyond the reporting of such information; our deeper
obligation- to ourselves, our students, and society- is to improve. Those to whom educators are
accountable have a corresponding obligation to support such attempts at improvement.
Last Updated : July 23, 2008