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Creating An Architecture of Assessment: using benchmarks to measure library instruction progress and success Candice Benjes-Small Eric Ackermann Radford University
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“So, Candice, how many library sessions have we taught this year?”
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Look at all these instruction librarians!
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But… Curricular changes Librarian burnout Students reported BI overload
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On the other hand University administration wants to see progress
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Looking for alternatives Number of sessions plateau Scoured literature Attended conferences Networked with colleagues
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Our environment Public university 9000+ students Courses not sequenced Instruction built on one-shots
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Macro look at program Focus on us, not students Search for improvements over time Student evaluations as basis
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A little bit about our evaluation form
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Goals Provide data to satisfy three constituents –Instruction librarians: immediate feedback –Instruction team leader: annual evaluations –Library Admin: justify instruction program
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Background Began in 2005 Iterative process
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Development 4-point Likert scale Originally had a comment box at end Major concern: linking comments to scale responses
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Solution: Linked score and comment responses Q1. I learned something useful from this workshop. Q2. I think this librarian was a good teacher.
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Inspiration for benchmarks University of Virginia library system use of metrics to determine success Targets outlined We would do one department rather than entire library To learn more about UVA’s efforts, visit http://www.lib.virginia.edu/bsc/
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Benchmark baby steps Look at just one small part of instruction program Begin with a single benchmark Identify one area to assess Decided to do one particular class
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Introduction to Psychology Teach fall and spring, beginning 2006 14 sections of 60+ students Shared script and PPT Everyone teaches over 2 days To see our shared PPT, visit http://lib.radford.edu/instruction/intropsych.ppt
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Developing benchmarks Selected a comment based metric for Instruction Team Chose class of comments: “What did you dislike about the teaching?” (Question #2)
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Current benchmarks Partial success: 5 < 10% total comments for Question 2 are negative Total success: < 5% total comments for Question 2 are negative
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How did we do?
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Results
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Success? Reached our desired benchmark for partial success- never quite went below 5% Tweaking the script again Continuous improvement
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Scaling for your program Adjust the benchmark levels Only look at score responses (quantitative) instead of comments (qualitative) Adjust the number of benchmarks used
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Sharing with administrators Team annual reports Stress evidence-based nature Use percentages, not a 4-point scale
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Disadvantages Time intensive Follow through required Evaluation forms not easy to change
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More disadvantages Labor intensive to analyze comments Results may reveal your failures
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Advantages Flexiblity to measure what you want to know Provides structured goal Evidence-based results more convincing
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More advantages Continuous evaluation results over time Data-driven decisions about instruction program Do-able
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Contact Candice Benjes-Small cbsmall@radford.edu Eric Ackermann egackerma@radford.edu
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