"How do we measure the impact of the university as distinct from four years of reading, watching, and discussing the news?"
By President Robert A. Scott
It seems that, whenever the economy sours and college graduates have troublefinding jobs, and jobs that don’t really require a college education raise entry standards,cynics emerge saying that four years in college provide little value-added benefit. Someeven argue that putting the college-bound in a closet instead of a classroom, andcomparing their skills and abilities after four years with the non-college-bound, wouldshow that the college-bound were still better prepared for work.
These are extreme statements, of course, and even those cynics want theirchildren to have the benefit of a college education.
But what are the benefits? How do we know they exist? How do we measure theimpact of the university as distinct from four years of reading, watching, and discussingthe news?
These are serious questions, and higher education institutions have not done aswell as they should in answering them in ways that give confidence to others. There arestill too many examples of education that is not grounded in the knowledge, skills,abilities, and values that twenty-first century students need. Employers and others wantgraduates who think both critically and globally, and communicate ideas clearly.
In some cases, new faculty, with freshly earned doctoral degrees, are put in frontof students without being prepared either to teach or to set standards that meet theinstitution’s understanding of excellence. It is an unfortunate truth that universityprofessors represent the rare profession in which there is no required, supervisedapprenticeship before entering a room to practice one’s chosen field. All others,architects, attorneys, clergy, dentists, engineers, physicians, school teachers, etc. arerequired to have such an experience before being licensed to practice.
Most colleges and universities take seriously the need to assess a facultycandidate’s ability to teach, and orient new faculty, both full-time and part-time, tostandards and expectations. Many institutions require annual reviews of all faculty andprovide extensive services through the centers for professional development.
Nevertheless, colleges are criticized for admitting students who are not preparedfor the rigors of the curriculum. Author Martin Nemko says, “Students’ lives are at stakeand colleges, that preach ethics throughout their curriculum, should not be hypocriticaland admit students merely to meet enrollment targets.”
Nemko also criticizes colleges and Congress for boosting college-going rates at atime when “employers are accelerating their offshoring, part-timing, and temping as many white college jobs as possible, … resulting in ever more un- and underemployedB.A.’s” in what he considers soft fields without ready connections to employment.
While these are legitimate concerns, Nemko and others paint with too broad abrush, and ignore the vigilant work of regional accrediting bodies in insisting on andassessing how colleges and universities establish key learning outcomes; design courses,programs, and experiences to provide opportunities for students to study successfully;assess whether students are learning what is intended; and monitor retention andgraduation rates, thus evaluating the degree of “fit” between a college’s mission, thestudents admitted, and the learning goals expressed.
For these reasons and more, institutional leaders and faculty know that the startingpoint for assessment is the campus mission statement. This sets forth not only lofty aims,but also specific learning goals. Then, they measure what is done and assess the gapbetween expectations and results by a variety of means, including the evaluation ofstudent work, local and national surveying of students and faculty, and the use of externalevaluators. They view the curriculum and extra-curriculum as a continuum. Theyattempt to distinguish between classroom and general learning, and know this is difficult.They acknowledge that some students come with knowledge and skills that are moreadvanced than others and this adds to the complication.
Institutions take seriously the need to assess learning. They are explicit in theirgoals and intentional in their behavior, knowing that the institution teaches through itsactivities as well as through the faculty it hires and nurtures, and that it is being measuredby the percentage of students who graduate.
We are confident that students benefit from the Adelphi education and experience.I know because I ask them when they are here and after they graduate. I ask them whatworks well and what should be fixed, and know that my colleague presidents do as well.In these ways, we know what goals we should continue to nurture, and what strategies forstudent learning may need enhancement, no matter the condition of the economy.
For further information, please contact:
Todd Wilson
Strategic Communications Director
p – 516.237.8634
e – twilson@adelphi.edu