Skip to main navigation Skip to page content
Indiana University Northwest

Campus Assessment of Student Learning Outcomes

Unit Name: Department of Modern Languages Assessment Summary Fall 2007-Spring 2008

What are the student learning outcomes in your unit?

The Department designs its curriculum and pedagogy to meet the State of Indiana’s Standards for Foreign Language Learning, which derives from the National Standards for Foreign Language Learning. These standards are organized around five goal areas, commonly termed “the five C’s of foreign language education”: Communication, Cultures, Connections, Comparisons, and Communities.

  • Communication. Communicate in Languages Other Than English

Standard 1. Interpersonal Communication: Students engage in conversations, provide and obtain information, express feelings and emotions, and exchange opinions.

Standard 2. Interpretive Communication: Students understand and interpret written and spoken language on a variety of topics.

Standard 3. Presentational Communication: Students present information, concepts, and ideas to an audience of listeners or readers on a variety of topics.

  • Cultures. Gain Knowledge and Understanding of Other Cultures

Standard 4. Practices of Culture: Students demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between the practices and perspectives of the culture studied.

Standard 5. Products of Culture: Students demonstrate an understanding of the relationship between the products and perspectives of the culture studied.

  • Connections. Connect with Other Disciplines and Acquire Information

Standard 6. Interdisciplinary Connections: Students reinforce and further their knowledge of other disciplines through the foreign language.

Standard 7. Accessing Information: Students acquire information and recognize the distinctive viewpoints that are only available through the foreign language and its cultures.

  • Comparisons. Develop Insight into the Nature of Language and Culture.

Standard 8. Language Comparisons: Students demonstrate understanding of the nature of language through comparisons of the language studied and their own.

Standard 9. Culture Comparisons: Students demonstrate understanding of the concept of culture through comparisons of the cultures studied and their own.

  • Communities. Participate in Multilingual Communities at Home and Around the World.

Standard 10. Language Within and Beyond School: Students use the language both within and beyond the school setting.

Standard 11. Lifelong Learning: Students show evidence of becoming life-long learners by using the language for personal enjoyment and enrichment.

Which outcome did you assess this academic year?

All of these outcomes were assessed.

How did you assess their skills before, during and / or at the end of the semester / academic year?

The Department of Modern Languages utilizes the following tools to insure comprehensive assessment of Modern Languages goals and objectives for the four-semester sequence and majors and minors.

Review of Syllabi—Our syllabi clearly state goals and objectives. They contain statements of purpose as well as scheduling and grading parameters.

Review of Grade Distribution and GPA index—The Department Chair provides grade distribution studies and G.P.A. indexes to the faculty so that they may assess their individual grading patterns. These tools help determine appropriate grade distribution for each course and guard against grade inflation or deflation. The Chair and other faculty use this information to review and discuss large discrepancies in grade distribution in multiple sections of the same course. This is particularly important in maintaining common standards of achievement for all students enrolled in first or second year language courses.

Review of Teaching in Annual Report—Each full-time faculty member provides an annual report on teaching output; adjunct faculty do this at their discretion. The Department Chair discusses the form with the faculty and writes a written assessment of full-time faculty’s work. The report and the assessment are a measure of each instructor’s achievements and weaknesses.

Student Evaluations—The Chair reviews student evaluations and distributes them to faculty for review and reconsideration of student needs and faculty’s pedagogical methods. In addition the Chair and /or the Language Coordinator meet with adjunct faculty to discuss their student evaluations. Promotion and tenure committees also review the evaluations.

Four-Semester Sequence

  • Coordination— The Chair and Language Coordinator supervise the instruction and testing of French, Spanish, and German at the beginning and intermediate levels, aiming to assure student achievement of our objectives. Faculty who teach these courses meet to discuss the text and exam formats, comparing their respective classroom experiences and grading practices. Adjunct faculty are provided with a departmental syllabus for the courses they are assigned, and they frequently consult with the Language Coordinator and other full-time faculty. In these ways, the Department exercises quality control over the basic instructional program in Spanish, French, and German.
  • Classroom Visits—The Language Coordinator periodically visits each adjunct faculty’s classes to evaluate teaching performance, and the Coordinator and instructor subsequently meet to discuss the evaluation. These visits allow for a review of teaching practices and an exchange of ideas and suggestions.
  • Tutorial System—We address retention and attrition via a student tutorial system. Advanced students who demonstrate their competence by achieving a minimum B average in their courses can serve as tutors for first and second-year students. The Department pays their wage, and the service is free to students who request it.
  • Listening—We monitor and assess student listening proficiency with listening comprehension sections, laboratory activities, chapter exams, via oral exams, and by monitoring students’ classroom activities and reactions to instructors’ instructions. We also assess students’ understanding of texts by having them recycle in written form what they have heard.
  • Speaking—Instructors monitor student progress as students speak in pair and groups in every class. The Department tests students’ oral skills at the middle and end of every semester to monitor progress over the two-year sequence. The testing involves oral and aural skills in different formats.
  • Reading—We use formal assessment to evaluate reading skills and knowledge of grammar and vocabulary, using short-answer formats in textbook exercises, homework assignments and chapter exams.
  •  Writing—Samples of student writing are collected throughout the semester. Particular emphasis is placed on multiple versions of journals and compositions. All students enrolled in a course, regardless of the class section, complete the same writing assignments. Their work is evaluated according to the same criteria, guaranteeing consistent assessment across sections. The writing component of the four-semester sequence was thoroughly revised in 1996, based on a study financed by a Writing Across the Curriculum mini-grant. The current design is the result of the objectives and results obtained through that study.
  •  Exit Questionnaire—Students finishing the four-semester Modern Languages program (F250 / G250 / S250) complete a written assessment of the program, including its curriculum and activities. This exit questionnaire is an important way in which the Department assesses the program each semester.

Minors and Majors

  • Portfolio—Students majoring or minoring in Spanish / French each have a portfolio. A portfolio consists of student exhibitions that demonstrate mastery of the skills of inquiry and expression. Credit is given on the basis of what students can actually do in “showing off” their knowledge and know-how. The exhibitions require reading, writing, questioning, speaking, and listening. In those portfolios we include representative materials which allow us to evaluate the level the student has attained in terms of written and oral expression. A portfolio might contain essays written in Spanish / French, translations from English to Spanish / French, or from Spanish / French to English, research papers on literary or cultural topics, and bibliographies for independent reading courses. Audio or video recordings might also be included.
  • Annual Progress Interview for Majors— The Department is creating the format for an annual interview with each major to assess and discuss strengths and weaknesses in the Foreign Language. When a student joins the program, a simple questionnaire could help us find out how s/he feels about his / her own competency in the foreign language and his/her strengths and weaknesses. Having thought about past learning experiences that students have had, we can then think about objectives for the coming year. We set objectives which students will be able to refer back to at the end of the year, to assess whether or not they have been met. In this way awareness of initial goals is an important step in the development of self-assessment.
  • Written assignments—Written assignments in language-based courses and research papers in literature, civilization, and linguistics courses are used to evaluate the four-year student progress in the program.
  • Capstone course—Each student completes a term paper in the target language as part of a 400-level culture, linguistics, or literature course in the junior or senior year. The capstone paper compels the student to synthesize and expand on the knowledge of culture and language acquired throughout the program. All faculty in the major section (French or Spanish) read the final version of the paper and provide reactions to the capstone instructor and student. Hence, this is another manner in which faculty assess student progress and the effectiveness of Department programs and methods. 
  • Exit questionnaire—The purpose of this questionnaire is to appreciate the student’s evaluation of the major upon graduation.
  • Survey of work-status—We contact Departmental alumni to track ways students utilize their language major in the work world.

Please summarize the data you have collected this semester / academic year.

The professors met in the late spring to assess the academic year as a whole. 

We discussed the student evaluations of adjunct faculty.

We explored how to improve student attendance, which has worsened in recent years.

Professors evaluated the use of the languages and cultures lab, and while all agree as to its great contribution to our program, we believe that a part-time director is needed, given the number of tasks related to running and maintaining the lab. To cover the costs for this position, and also to pay our lab monitors and to purchase vital items such as replacement computers, the Department calculated an appropriate lab fee and requested that it be implemented starting in the fall of ’08, for all 100 and 200-level courses that often meet in the lab.        

Other assessment data for the 2007-2008 academic year is still pending.

Please describe any programmatic changes you have made or are planning to make based on the data you have collected.

Department professors agreed to conduct more teaching observations for particular adjunct faculty, given some criticisms on their student evaluations.

For the spring of ’08, we created a new Department attendance policy: now only eight absences, no matter what the reason, are allowed. Having more than eight results in automatic failure. The faculty agrees that the new policy has improved attendance, and, thus, student learning, in our courses.

A lab fee will be assessed starting this fall, and the Department prepared a position description for the lab director and provided this to the administration, along with various questions concerning when and how to spend the lab fee funds.

The faculty understands that we must dedicate more time to collecting and compiling information derived from various types of student assessments (e.g., annual progress interviews with majors and surveys of the work status of our graduates).

**Note: Please use this template to provide the responses to the prompts above.**