Each year I am so happy to coordinate the WCET Awards initiative, through which our cooperative honors institutions and individuals for exciting work in technology-enhanced learning. One of my favorite aspects of this initiative is working with our WOW Awards. The WCET Outstanding Work (WOW) Awards honor member institutions and organizations that develop technology-based solutions to challenging educational needs. WOW award 2019 logo

This year we had many exceptional nominees for the WOW Awards. The award committee selected three winners out of a competitive pool of nominees: the Colorado Department of Higher Education’s OER Council, Granite State College, and Rio Salado College. Over the next several weeks, each of these institutions will be featured here on WCET Frontiers.

Today we are excited to hear from Rio Salado College about the Dynamic Assessment Data Dashboard – or DADD. Enjoy reading about this great program to help assess important, soft and career related skills.

Lindsey Downs, WCET


Measuring “Soft” Skills

Even under the best of circumstances, with plenty of human and financial resources, measuring student achievement of “soft” skills is hard work. Yet, the ability to solve problems and communicate clearly are the types of skills that employers say they are looking for in potential hires. Instructor at front of classroom pointing to a screenAccording to ​a June 2019 WCET Frontiers post​ on soft skills, ​​only 7% of employers surveyed said they’d hire a candidate who possessed the technical skills required but lacked critical thinking skills, while 52% of employers said they’d hire a candidate who possessed critical thinking skills but lacked the required technical skills.

Efforts to assess and document student performance in soft-skill areas are typically isolated to general education courses that explicitly teach those skills, such as First Year Composition, College Critical Reading, Public Speaking, etc. Though it is important to include snapshot data from such courses when reporting on student performance on institution-wide outcomes, this approach is not sufficient to capture the learning that occurs over time across all courses and programs, and it does not reveal curricular weaknesses that may need to be addressed in courses that are not part of the general education core.

In addition to assessing learning outcome performance at the institution level, we need to be able to drill down to the individual student level to ensure equity among populations. A student at a laptop computer looking at a textbookWithout the ability to identify trends and gaps, curricular changes informed by macro-level data have the potential to result in negative unintended consequences for particularly vulnerable student populations. And if the ability to think critically and communicate effectively truly are “employability” skills, then it is our responsibility to ensure that each and every one of our students has an equal chance to achieve those skills. In order to more effectively assess soft skills, identify trends and gaps, and impact curricular changes across the college, Rio Salado created the Dynamic Assessment Data Dashboard, or DADD.

Approaching Equity in Assessment – the DADD

At Rio Salado College, we have taken a unique approach to the hard work of soft-skill assessment and improvement. Large skyscraper with Rio Salado College logoUsing descriptive data available in our assessment database, faculty subject-matter experts in the areas of Critical Thinking, Writing, Reading, Information Literacy, and Oral Communication “tag” assignments across the curriculum that align with one or more of these skills.

Our Dynamic Assessment Data Dashboard (DADD) displays the results of this backend work so all faculty, including those teaching in other areas, can see how their students are performing.

As illustrated below, assignments in which student performance fell below the target are highlighted so that faculty can focus their efforts on modifying their instructional practices to improve overall student performance:

Dashboard showing assessment data in a spreadsheet

The results can then be sorted by student groupings such as Pell-eligible, ethnicity, or those who were placed into developmental English, math, and/or reading courses, to reveal potential curricular gaps to be addressed in any of the courses we offer.

closer view of the dashboard with student assessment data

The DADD puts critical data directly into the hands of the faculty. Instead of relying on guesswork or anecdotal feedback from a handful of students, faculty can use performance data from all students to make informed decisions on instructional interventions.

On-demand access to data that can be filtered by date range means that faculty can quickly check the effectiveness of interventions, thus shortening the time to complete an improvement cycle.

Several faculty members at a table with laptops

Ultimately, the goal is to achieve equitable learning outcomes across all student groups, including vulnerable populations, so that students leave our college with the not-so-soft skills they need to be successful in the workplace.

We owe it to our students to approach educational equity with the “sense of urgency” that Stacey VanderHeiden Güney described in her recent Frontiers post. Though this is just part of Rio’s story, our hope is that this approach will inform other colleges and universities that have embraced this important work.

Rio Salado College is honored to have been recognized with a WCET WOW award for this initiative, and we look forward to hearing from other institutions that are trying out new ideas in this space.

Kate Smith headshot
Kate Smith, Interim President,
Rio Salado College
kate.smith@riosalado.edu

 

kate smith headshot
Angela Felix, Faculty Chair for Languages
Rio Salado College
angela.felix@riosalado.edu

 


CC Logo

Learn about WCET Creative Commons 4.0 License

 

Subscribe

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Join 2,374 other subscribers

Archive By Month

Blog Tags

Distance Education (315)Student Success (294)Online Learning (228)Managing Digital Learning (218)State Authorization (213)WCET (211)U.S. Department of Education (203)Regulation (196)Technology (167)Digital Learning (148)Innovation (125)Teaching (121)Collaboration/Community (114)WCET Annual Meeting (105)Course Design (103)Professional Development (98)Access (97)Faculty (88)Cost of Instruction (88)SAN (87)Financial Aid (84)Legislation (83)Completion (74)Assessment (69)Instructional Design (68)Open Educational Resources (66)Accreditation (65)COVID-19 (64)SARA (64)Accessibility (62)Credentials (62)Professional Licensure (62)Competency-based Education (61)Quality (61)Data and Analytics (60)Research (58)Diversity/Equity/Inclusion (56)Reciprocity (56)WOW Award (51)Outcomes (47)Workforce/Employment (46)Regular and Substantive Interaction (43)Policy (42)Higher Education Act (41)Negotiated Rulemaking (39)Virtual/Augmented Reality (37)Title IV (36)Practice (35)Academic Integrity (34)Disaster Planning/Recovery (34)Leadership (34)WCET Awards (30)Every Learner Everywhere (29)IPEDS (28)State Authorization Network (28)Adaptive/Personalized Learning (28)Reauthorization (28)Military and Veterans (27)Survey (27)Credits (26)Disabilities (25)MOOC (23)WCET Summit (23)Evaluation (22)Complaint Process (21)Retention (21)Enrollment (21)Artificial Intelligence (20)Correspondence Course (18)Physical Presence (17)WICHE (17)Cybersecurity (16)Products and Services (16)Forprofit Universities (15)Member-Only (15)WCET Webcast (15)Blended/Hybrid Learning (14)System/Consortia (14)Digital Divide (14)NCOER (14)Textbooks (14)Mobile Learning (13)Consortia (13)Personalized Learning (12)Futures (11)Marketing (11)Privacy (11)STEM (11)Prior Learning Assessment (10)Courseware (10)Teacher Prep (10)Social Media (9)LMS (9)Rankings (9)Standards (8)Student Authentication (8)Partnership (8)Tuition and Fees (7)Readiness and Developmental Courses (7)What's Next (7)International Students (6)K-12 (6)Lab Courses (6)Nursing (6)Remote Learning (6)Testing (6)Graduation (6)Proctoring (5)Closer Conversation (5)ROI (5)DETA (5)Game-based/Gamification (5)Dual Enrollment (4)Outsourcing (4)Coding (4)Security (4)Higher Education Trends (4)Mental Health (4)Fall and Beyond Series (3)In a Time of Crisis (3)Net Neutrality (3)Universal Design for Learning (3)Cheating Syndicates Series (3)ChatGPT (3)Enrollment Shift (3)Nontraditional Learners (2)Student Identity Verification (2)Cross Skilling/Reskilling (2)Virtual Summit (2)Higher Education (2)Title IX (1)Business of Higher Education (1)OPMs (1)Department of Education (1)Third-Party Servicers (1)microcredentials (1)Minority Serving Institution (1)