assessment and reform of the texas tech university core curriculum

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ASSESSMENT AND REFORM OF THE TEXAS
TECH UNIVERSITY CORE CURRICULUM
Gary S. Elbow
Associate Vice-Provost for Academic Affairs, Texas
Tech University
THE CHALLENGE:
• Accommodate the new Texas Higher Education
Coordinating Board Component Area Objectives into the
Texas Tech University core curriculum
• improve the core curriculum
• strengthen assessment
THE ISSUES
• New Component Area Objectives are skill-based, while the old
Exemplary Educational Objectives (EEOs) were content-based.
• Texas Tech University core curriculum was implemented in 1987-88 and
by 2007 had grown to over 650 courses, of which 459 were junior or
senior courses.
• Included “all courses” statements (English, foreign languages, history,
and sociology).
• Mainly content-based
• Little or no assessment
• Very general core objectives (based on THECB statements)
TYPICAL CORE CURRICULUM STATEMENT
TTU Natural Science Core Curriculum Objective Statement:
The objective of the study of the natural sciences component of a core
curriculum is to enable the student to understand, construct, and evaluate
relationships in the natural sciences, and to enable the student to
understand the bases for building and testing theories. The natural sciences
investigate the phenomena of the physical world.
THECB Component Area Statement for Life and Physical Science (10/2011)
Courses in this category focus on describing, explaining, and predicting
natural phenomena using the scientific method.
Courses involve the understanding of interactions among natural phenomena
and the implications of scientific principles on human experiences.
CORE CURRICULUM COMPOSITION IN 2007
•
Communication (Rhetoric) (6 hrs)
2 courses/0 upper level
•
Communication (Oral) (3 hrs)
9 courses/3 upper level
•
Mathematics & Philosophy (6 hrs)
24 courses/6 upper level
•
Natural Science (8 hrs)
31 courses/1 upper level
•
Technology and Applied Science (3 hrs)*
69 courses/35 upper level
•
Humanities (3 hrs)
211 courses/185 upper level
•
Visual and Performing Arts (3 hrs)
120 courses/74 upper level
•
U. S. History (6 hrs)
4 courses/2 upper level
•
U.S. government (6 hrs)
2 courses/0 upper level
•
Individual and Group Behavior (3 hrs)
* removed from the core in fall 2012
112 courses/78 upper level
THE SOLUTION
• Use the new Component Area Objectives created by the
Coordinating Board in October 2011 as a basis for
reforming the core curriculum.
• Focus on non-specialized lower-level courses
• Include assessment as a part of reforming the core
curriculum
• Emphasis on skill-building rather than content for core
curriculum assessment
THECB COMPONENT AREA OBJECTIVES
• Critical Thinking
• Communication
• Empirical and Quantitative Reasoning
• Teamwork
• Individual Responsibility
• Social Responsibility
Based on the VALUE rubrics of the AAC&U
THE PROCESS
• Terminate the existing core curriculum as of fall semester
2014
• Establish a review process for creating a new core
curriculum to be implemented at the beginning of fall
semester 2014
• Set up a time line
• Build a website
• Create a course request on-line application
CORE CURRICULUM REVIEW TIMELINE
•
Preliminary review of course proposals by a special subcommittee of the Core Curriculum Committee during
Summer 2012. Deficient proposals for courses that appear to meet requirements will be returned to the sponsoring
unit for revision and resubmittal. Proposals for courses that are not suitable for the core curriculum will be returned
to the sponsoring unit with an explanation of why they are rejected. Rejected courses may be appealed to the Core
Curriculum Steering Committee with a response in September.
•
September 7, 2012: Full proposals due, with complete syllabus including learning outcomes and assessments.
Syllabi are forwarded to the appropriate Component Area Committee (core area specialists) for final review. Any
proposals with problems will be returned to the sponsoring unit for revision and resubmittal. Proposals for courses
that are unsuitable for the core curriculum will be returned to the sponsoring unit with an explanation of why they
are rejected. The Component Area Committees will report their findings no later than December 3, 2012. Rejected
courses may be appealed to the Steering Committee
•
March 18, 2013: Any syllabi returned to a sponsoring unit for revision must be returned to the Core Curriculum
Committee by this date.
•
May 3, 2013: Core curriculum course lists are presented by the Component Area Committees to the Core Curriculum
Steering Committee for review and a recommendation for approval.
•
September 2013: Core curriculum is submitted to the Academic Council for review and a recommendation to the
PSVP for or against approval. Any recommended revisions will be considered for implementation during September
and October and the revised core curriculum resubmitted for the October Academic Council meeting.
•
November 30, 2013: Core curriculum sent to the Coordinating Board for its approval.
•
Fall 2014: New core curriculum is implemented.
NEWCORE.TTU.EDU WEB PAGE TOPICS
• Home
• Core Course Requirements
• Core Course Approval Process
• Component Area Criteria
• Component Area Objectives
• Submit/Review Core Course Application
• Frequently Asked Questions
THE REVIEW PROCESS
• Core Curriculum Committee, >65 members representing all colleges
• Selected for familiarity with component areas
• Divided into 9 subcommittees (communications; mathematics &
philosophy; life and physical sciences; creative arts; language,
philosophy & culture; U.S./Texas history; U. S. government; social and
behavioral sciences)
• Steering committee comprised of chair of each component area
committee
• 2 phases
• Phase 1 Steering Committee review of core course requests
• Phase 2 Component area committee review of course syllabi
THE REVIEW PROCESS (CONTINUED)
Phase 1 core course request form
Called for a course to address each Coordinating Board Component Area
Objective and each Texas Tech University Core Curriculum student
learning objective.
Also must address College-Level Outcome for component area
Outcome of review
Course is approved
Course is returned for revision
Course is rejected as inappropriate for the core curriculum
Topic is not appropriate
Emphasis is not consistent with core requirement
THE REVIEW PROCESS (CONTINUED)
•
Outcome of Phase 1 review
•
Communication
•
Mathematics and Philosophy
19 submitted
2 withdrawn, 2 pending
•
Life and Physical Sciences
30 submitted
3 pending appr.
•
Creative Arts
20 submitted
1 rejected
•
Language, Philosophy, & Culture
48 submitted
7 rejected or withdrawn
•
Social and Behavioral Sciences
39 submitted
2 withdrawn, 4 pending
•
U.S. History
6 submitted
3 rejected
•
U.S. Government
2 submitted
0 rejected or withdrawn
•
Total
9 submitted
1 withdrawn
172 approved, revised, or pending approval
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REQUEST (CONT.)
CORE AREA
CREATIVE ARTS
COURSE TYPE
Existing Course
COURSE ID
HONS 2314
DEPARTMENT
HONS
COLLEGE
HR
COURSE TITLE
International Cinema
COURSE CATALOG
DESCRIPTION(25
words or less)
(3) Analysis of foreign and ethnic cinema as an expression of human values
and creativity viewed through the lens of a distinctive culture or cultures.
May be repeated as the topic varies with permission of the Honors dean.
Fulfills multicultural and Core Visual and Performing Arts requirement.
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REQUEST (CONT)
NUMBER OF SECTIONS TO BE OFFERED PER
2
YEAR
ESTIMATED ENROLLMENT PER YEAR
40
Name and e-mail address of individual to whom responses and questions about this course
maybe addressed.
REQUESTOR NAME
Gary Elbow
EMAIL ADDRESS
gary.elbow@ttu.edu
DEPARTMENT APPROVAL DATE
04/30/2012
COLLEGE APPROVAL DATE
05/01/2012
CURRENT APPLICATION STATUS
Revise
REVISIONS
REJECTION
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REQUEST (CONT.)
•
COORDINATING BOARD COMPONENT AREA OBJECTIVES
•
Critical Thinking Skills: to include creative thinking, innovation, inquiry, and
analysis, evaluation and synthesis of information
•
Students willl practice critical thinking through analysis of foreign (non-English
language) films they have viewed. Students are required to write critical essays on
12-14 films during the semester. The essay rubrics call upon students to evaluate
aesthetic qualities (cinematography, sound, color, sets and setting, costume, etc.),
acting, story-telling, philosophical perspectives, cultural content, historical and
socio-political context, and treatment of social responsibility, among other
elements. The practice of critical thinking is essential for students successfully to
craft acceptable essays.
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REQUEST (CONT.)
•
Communication Skills: to include effective development, interpretation and
expression of ideas through written, oral and visual communication
•
Students write essays frequently during the course of the semester and those
essays are carefully critiqued to encourage consistent improvement in student
writing skill. In addition, students will be asked to form teams to write an outline for
a film Visual communication comes through student interpretation of what they see
on the screen. Students are not required to create films or otherwise demonstrate
the ability to produce examples of visual communication. Discussion of films is an
integral part of HONS 2314, and students are expected to demonstrate their
understanding of the films, evaluation of their aesthetic content, and
comprehension of the cultural context in which the film was made. Instructors use
the Socratic method to elicit responses from students when discussion lags.
Sometimes all grading is based on essays and class discussion, but when
examinations are used they are essay-type.
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REQUEST (CONT.)
•
Teamwork: to include the ability to consider different points of view and to work
effectively with others to support a shared purpose or goal
•
Honors seminar courses generally have enrollments of 20 students or less. This
allows for students to be organized into teams to work on specific projects. For this
purpose, students will be organized into groups of 3-5 individuals to develop a film
script outline that deals with a specific issue that has been developed in one or
more of the films shown in the course. The outlines will be presented in written
form as well as in an oral report delivered to the class by each team. Students will
be asked to evaluate the level of participation of fellow group members and
participation will also be monitored by the course instructor.
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REQUEST (CONT.)
•
Social Responsibility: to include intercultural competence, knowledge of civic
responsibility, and the ability to engage effectively in regional, national, and global
Communitities.
•
Films chosen for presentation in HONS 2314 are serious (“art house”) films that
deal with important issues related to social responsibility as related to the countries
from which the films come. As noted above (Objective #1) students will be asked to
comment on these how the films deal with social responsibility in their film reviews.
Because the films deal with these issues in a distinct, non-US cultural context,
students are exposed to a variety of regional, national, and global communities.
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REQUEST (CONT.)
•
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY STUDENT LEARNING OBJECTIVES FOR CREATIVE ARTS
•
Identify and describe a body of works (individually and collectively) in the creative arts.
•
This course specifically addresses cinema as an art form. Students are called upon to
describe and evaluate aesthetic qualities in a series of films from a region or regions of
the world.fy and describe a body of works (individually and collectively) in the creative
arts.
•
Explain and differentiate creative works as expressions of values within cultural and
historical contexts.
•
Films are cultural productions and, as such, they reflect the cultural values and historical
contexts of the regions in which they were produced. In essays and class discussions,
students are expected to reflect upon these issues as they are expressed in films.
•
Analyze and summarize aesthetic principles that structure creative works.
•
Essay rubrics specifically call upon students to identify and analyze the aesthetic
elements of the films they see.
TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY
CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REQUEST (CONT.)
• TEXAS TECH UNIVERSITY COLLEGE LEVEL COMPETENCY
FOR CREATIVE ARTS
• Students graduating from Texas Tech University should be
able to: construct, present, and defend critical and aesthetic
judgments of works in the creative arts.
• Students are required to write multiple essays in which they
make critical judgments about the aesthetic elements in the
films they see. They are also required to defend the critical
judgments they present in their essays and in class
discussions.
PHASE 2 CORE CURRICULUM COURSE REVIEW
• Phase 2 is in progress
• All but 10 syllabi have been submitted
• Committees have developed rubrics for course syllabus
review
• Committees are beginning to meet
• Completion of reviews due by end of Fall 2012 semester
• Courses returned for review will have until March 18 to
submit revisions
ANTICIPATED BENEFITS
• Smaller core curriculum (to 172 from 265 currently not
counting Technology and Applied Science, which was
dropped from the core as of fall 2012)
• Removed all but one upper-level course from the core
• Focused on general courses that focus on skill acquisition
• Improved assessment because specific assessment
strategies were required for core curriculum approval
• Improved monitoring of core curriculum courses
ISSUES
• Core curriculum is heavily weighted toward Colleges of Arts and
Sciences and Visual and Performing Arts; some professional colleges
have complained about bias in the process
• Science labs (added as a degree requirement), transfer issues
• Still need more work on assessment. Some departments and some
individual faculty still are not doing meaningful assessment
• Some component areas have too many courses—would be better to
focus on fewer courses
• Have not completely disabused departments of the idea that courses
must be in the core for them to meet minimum enrollment numbers
• Need to make faculty more aware of VALUE Rubrics
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