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OFFICE OF FACULTY GRANTS &
INSTITUTIONAL RESEARCH
Class of 2009 Longitudinal Study
In collaboration with Colorado
College and Earlham
College, Kalamazoo College has begun a research project,
supported with a grant from the Teagle
Foundation, in which we will assess the extent to which
our students become better educated over their four years in college.
Ours is one of six
Teagle-funded projects, involving colleges and universities
from across the country, that will demonstrate the effectiveness
of a liberal arts education. We are collectively administering
the Cooperative Institutional Research Project (CIRP) Survey,
the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), and the Collegiate
Learning Assessment (CLA) instrument, as well as holding student
focus groups and annual summer data sharing conversations to assess
the value-added by our institutions to our students' intellectual
and personal growth.
Each of our colleges has a strong independent streak: Colorado's
adventurous spirit and unique learning opportunities of the Block
Plan; Earlham's Quaker traditions, which guide the institution
and uphold the pursuit of truth; and Kalamazoo's K-Plan, through
which more than 80% of students study abroad and all students
complete a senior individualized project. Students at all three
institutions become educated in deep and broad liberal arts curricula,
are encouraged to study abroad and engage with their local community
and, through those experiences, develop a lifelong love of learning,
intercultural understanding, and social responsibility. Our distinct
academic calendars, unique histories and organizational sagas,
and different types of students of similar abilities will allow
for interesting inter-institutional comparisons that will help
each of our institutions to become more consequential with what
we learn while making it easier for other institutions to apply
what we reveal as best practices.
By providing funding for our collaborative efforts, the Teagle
Foundation serves a catalyst for enhancing knowledge of our own
effectiveness, using that knowledge to effect positive change
in our institutions, and conveying the benefits of knowledge-based
change to broader audiences.
A key element of our study is the Collegiate
Learning Assessment (CLA) (see also the Atlantic
Monthly article about the CLA). The CLA focuses on
assessing what many would agree is at the core of a college education
- the ability to think critically, reason analytically, and communicate
in writing clearly. All of our students have abilities in these
areas when they matriculate, and everyone anticipates improvement
in these areas during the college years (and beyond!). The 2005
entering class will take the CLA during orientation week. Student
athletes already on campus will take the CLA earlier in September.
In four years' time, we will ask these students to take the exam
again. Because our goal is to measure the College's effectiveness
in enhancing the education of our students, we will be using data
we collect in the aggregate to illustrate how much the graduating
class of 2009, as a whole, develops over four years.
If you have questions, please feel free to contact Dr. Paul Sotherland,
project director paulsoth@kzoo.edu
or Anne Dueweke, director of Institutional Research adueweke@kzoo.edu.
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