Campus Assessment of Student Learning Outcomes
Unit Name: Department of Modern Languages Assessment Summary Fall 2009-Spring 2010
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What are the student learning outcomes in your unit? |
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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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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. |
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Which outcome did you assess this academic year? |
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All of these outcomes were assessed. |
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How did you assess their skills before, during and / or at the end of the semester / academic year? |
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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
Minors and Majors
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Please summarize the data you have collected this semester / academic year. |
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The professors met in the spring to assess the academic year as a whole. We discussed the student evaluations of adjunct and full-time faculty. We also discussed the effectiveness of our rule that no student can have more than 8 absences and pass one of our courses. We agree that it has increased students' attendance and learning. Many of our majors and minors requested more courses on culture and on translation, since they feel that these areas will contribute directly to their learning about world languages and cultures. |
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Please describe any programmatic changes you have made or are planning to make based on the data you have collected. |
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We increased our assistance and guidance for some part-time instructors who needed to find new ways to increase their teaching effectiveness. In the fall of 2010 the Spanish section provided a new 300-level Spanish translation course. And in the spring of 2011, we will offer a 400-level Spanish translation course and a 300-level Hispanic cultures course. Professors all agree that our languages and cultures lab makes a great contribution to our program, but 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 charges a lab fee for all 100 and 200-level courses that often meet in the lab. The chairperson worked with Indiana University administrators to increase the fee in order to acquire sufficient funding, but Indiana University put a freeze on raising fees. We believe that it is vital that our part-time coordinator also be a teacher in our department. We continue to search for a solution to this situation, since the responsibilities of lab coordination seem to us to be too demanding for any professor to carry out and still meet the other demands of our work. Currently various administrators are working with the Department to find increased funding, in order to purchase new computers and software by the summer of 2011. Faculty have begun to tailor their course syllabi more to the new Gen Ed guidelines. |
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