Summer 2005
   

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CIC Director of Research Hal Hartley (left), works with K.D. Godwin of Voorhees College (SC) and Deborah Hanson, University of Great Falls (MT) as they navigate through the CLA instrument.

Members of the CIC/Collegiate Learning Assessment (CLA) Consortium met for the first time this summer to work on campus goals and strategies for administering the new assessment instrument. On July 18 and 19, teams from 35 institutions gathered in Washington, DC to discuss the design, administration, and use of the CLA, and were given the opportunity to ask questions, express concerns, and offer suggestions.
     The meeting was cosponsored by CIC and the Council for Aid to Education (CAE), the organization that designed the instrument. The CLA is a new assessment tool—one of the first of its kind—that measures the cognitive growth of students and attempts to define the “value-added” contributed by the institution to student learning. Consortium members have committed to administer the CLA to groups of freshmen and seniors during the next three academic years, and will meet annually to discuss results and share
best practices.
     During the opening presentation, Richard Hersh, senior fellow at CAE, stressed that “the accountability movement is upon us because the importance of higher education is much greater today…. Assessment is a way of teaching and learning…and the CLA—which allows comparisons across institutions—empowers colleges to be more efficacious and successful in getting students to learn what we value. It’s a powerful institutional change tool.”
     Marc Chun, research scientist at CAE, led participants through the basic design of the CLA, and gave them the opportunity to navigate the instrument using laptop computers. Participants also met in small groups to discuss issues of curriculum design, faculty cooperation, and student recruitment.
 

Panelists (l-r) Paul Presson of Westminster College (UT), Marian Sherwood of Allegheny College (PA), and Joel Frederickson of Bethel University (MN) shared their experiences with the CLA.


     Using the CLA for accountability and improvement was the topic of a presentation by Margaret Miller, Director of the Center for the Study of Higher Education at the Curry School of Education, University of Virginia, editor of Change magazine, and Director of the Pew-sponsored National Forum on College-Level Learning. Miller noted that the CLA is “the first viable attempt to bring accountability and improvement together” in an assessment approach. She also recommended linking CLA results with other campus assessment data, including graduate admission and licensure exams, and surveys of student experience, such as the CIRP Freshman Survey and the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE).
     A panel of participants from institutions already administering the CLA shared some of their successful strategies for administering it. Joel Frederickson, professor and assistant dean for assessment, Bethel University (MN); Paul Presson, associate provost for assessment, Westminster College (UT); and Marian Sherwood, director of institutional research at Allegheny College (PA) stressed the importance of securing student and faculty involvement in order to establish integrity and gain momentum.
     The CLA will be administered at 35 participating institutions beginning this fall; a second Consortium meeting will be held next summer. The CIC/CLA Consortium is supported by grants from the Teagle Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York.

2005 CIC/CLA Consortium Summer Meeting Participating Institutions

Alaska Pacific University
Allegheny College (PA)
Aurora University (IL)
Averett University (VA)
Barton College (NC)
Bethel University (MN)
Cabrini College (PA)
Centenary College (NJ)
Charleston Southern University (SC)
College of Saint Benedict/
  St. John’s University (MN)
Fontbonne University (MO)

Franklin Pierce College (NH)
Hampshire College (MA)
Heritage University (WA)
Indiana Wesleyan University
Loyola University New Orleans (LA)
Lynchburg College (VA)

Marian College (WI)
Pace University (NY)
Pacific University (OR)
Seton Hill University (PA)
Southwestern University (TX)
Stonehill College (MA)
Texas Lutheran University
University of Charleston (WV)
University of Evansville (IN)
University of Great Falls (MT)
Ursinus College (PA)
Ursuline College (OH)
Voorhees College (SC)
Wagner College (NY)
Wartburg College (IA)
Wesley College (DE)
Westminster College (UT)
William Woods University (MO)

 


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Last updated: August 2005
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