Standardized Assessments of College Learning: Past and Future
Blog Post
March 22, 2016
In a time of growing public anxiety about higher education prices and student debt, colleges and universities are facing unprecedented pressure to show results. In response major testing companies are offering a solution: A new generation of standardized assessments designed to measure the critical thinking, analytic reasoning, and communication skills that graduates need to prosper.
In the new report, Standardized Assessments of College Learning: Past and Future," I look at current research regarding assessment policies and outcomes — and make recommendations for developing future assessment for American higher education.
Effective assessment of student learning in any context represents a significant challenge, and controversies persist at all levels of education about which methods of data collection and analysis are most effective and appropriate. Some fear that the creation of a widespread testing system at the college level will lead to "teaching to the test" and invite test fraud.
Here are my recommendations for the next stage of higher education assessment development:
- Standardized tests of collegiate learning must be subject to external validation. This would allow researchers to determine how well the tests work and what potential unforeseen consequences may arise.
- Faculty and local administration must be welcomed into the assessment process, with this they are far more likely to see themselves as partners rather than as targets. Control of disciplinary assessments is a place where faculty can be brought into the assessment picture.
- Assessment of college learning should take advantage of the power of representative sampling and inferential statistics. There is no need to test all students, all of the time. Taking samples that adequately reflect the various forms of diversity on a campus can be responsibly used to draw inferences about the campus population as a whole.
- Standardized assessments and localized disciplinary assessments should be used in concert with student outcomes data to better understand both individual colleges and the system as a whole. This outcomes data would include financial and life-satisfaction figures from college graduates — to give a better understanding if college is actually improving long-term life outcomes for our graduates.
- Assessments cannot be no stakes, but neither should they be high stakes. It must be used to actually improve our institutions; it can be a guide for administrative practices and help identify strengths and weaknesses in regards to areas where students are seeing unequal outcomes.
The full report can be found here.
I will be sharing more of my thoughts about assessment in higher education as part of "The Future of College Assessment" event hosted by New America's Education Policy Program on March 28, 2016. Kevin Carey, Director of New America's Education Policy Program will moderate a lively discussion about the past, present and future of assessment. Other panelists include Alberto Acerada, Senior Director of Business Development and Global Education at ETS and Roger Benjamin, President of the Council for Aid to Education. "