Friday, May 9, 2008

Education

USN Current Issue
Morse Code: Inside the College Rankings

Beating the 'Best Student Fetish'

March 05, 2008 01:17 PM ET | Robert Morse | Permanent Link

In a recent article at Inside Higher Ed, Gerald Graff, a professor of English at the University of Illinois-Chicago and president of the Modern Language Association, questions why many in academia are so afraid of the outcomes assessment movement and why they think—incorrectly—that it means a lessening of their academic freedom.

Graff points out that many schools just want to admit the best students (he calls it the "Best Student Fetish") and don't seem that interested in determining whether they have learned anything at the university or not. He writes that:

I've become a believer in the potential of learning outcomes assessment, which challenges the elitism of the Best-Student Fetish by asking us to articulate what we expect our students to learn—all of them, not just the high-achieving few—and then holds us accountable for helping them learn it. Whereas the Best-Student Fetish asks who the great students are before we see them, outcomes assessment changes the question to what students can do as a result of seeing us. Furthermore, once we start asking whether our students are learning what we want them to learn, we realize pretty quickly that making this happen is necessarily a team effort, requiring us to think about our teaching not in isolation but in relation to that of our colleagues.

Graff's views clearly are not universal, and his article has drawn many comments from those who believe in assessment and from those who think it is harmful for various reasons.

One thoughtful comment on the need for doing outcomes assessment came from Don Langenberg, chancellor emeritus at University System of Maryland. He wrote that "of course, properly assessing learning is as challenging a task as acquiring the learning itself, and we're not yet very good at it. But that difficulty should not be used as an excuse to evade our responsibility to learn whether we actually do produce a product."

Of course, U.S. News supports the call for more assessment and accountability in higher education. In the end, the chief beneficiaries of this information will be the families who will be better able to determine how well colleges are doing at their main mission—educating students.

Tags: education

Tools: Share | | Comments (1)

Reader Comments

Hmm

I'm not sure of institutions of higher education should be held accountable for the success/failure of their students. Look, if a college student is not performing well, then parents can say, "sorry charlie, you're not going back this semester, I didn't take out a second mortgage for you to drink your way through college and get Cs." That's what happened in my family...I'm more concerned with how many recent graduates are employed in 3 months, 6 months, and even a yr after graduating. But even there, there's no one-size fits all. If you're a liberal arts student looking for a publishing job in NYC, you're going to be looking for a long time. It's not the school's fault you're in an over-saturated job market.

Colleges may be there to teach us, but really if we choose to waste our parents' money and not go to class and pull all-nighters resulting in sub-par work and achievement, it's not the colleges fault. Now on the other hand, if the students are federally funded, they should be held to a higher standard as far as achievement is concerned and to some extent we are.

Add your thoughts

Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our comment guidelines.

advertisement

Use of this Web site constitutes acceptance of our Terms and Conditions of Use and Privacy Policy.