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Cover image for product 0787914118
Measuring What Matters: Competency-Based Learning Models in Higher Education: New Directions for Institutional Research, No. 110
ISBN: 978-0-7879-1411-0
Paperback
120 pages
July 2001, Jossey-Bass
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  • Description
  • Table of Contents
EDITOR'S NOTES (Richard A. Voorhees).

1. Competency-Based Learning Models: A Necessary Future (Richard A. Voorhees).
This chapter provides an overview of the movement toward competency-based learning models. It is this new paradigm that will ultimately redefine the roles of faculty, institutions, and accreditors.

2. Working in Partnership with Faculty to Transform Undergraduate Curricula (Elizabeth A. Jones).
Specific issues involved in defining and embedding competencies across courses and other learning experiences in order to enhance student performance are examined. Strategies are offered for faculty and institutional researchers who want to work together to improve student learning.

3. Measuring and Reporting Competencies (Trudy H. Bers).
Measuring and reporting competencies requires the implementation of new and innovative processes that often conflict with existing systems of measuring and reporting learning outcomes. Examining the ways that some institutions have addressed these issues can be a useful starting point for educators as they begin planning competency-based programs.

4. Using Competencies to Connect the Workplace and Postsecondary Education (Karen Paulson).
To maintain viability, postsecondary institutions must prepare their graduates to enter today's performance-driven labor market. This chapter examines the use of competencies in business and summarizes skill and competency resources that institutions can use to ready their students for successful entry into the workforce.

5. Standard Setting (T. Dary Erwin, Steven L. Wise).
Higher education assessment is moving steadily toward increased accountability. Assessment practitioners, institutional researchers, and faculty must be able to set defensible standards by using systematically followed procedures. This chapter discusses two methods that practitioners can use to set standards.

6. Competencies, Regional Accreditation, and Distance Education: An Evolving Role? (Dawn Geronimo Terkla).
This chapter provides an overview of the link between competencies and current accreditation standards and examines the influence of distance education on the accreditation landscape. Techniques are suggested that institutional researchers can use to position their institutions advantageously in the contemporary accreditation process.

7. Creating and Implementing Competency-Based Learning Models (Alice Bedard Voorhees).
Institutional researchers can take the lead in addressing the public and workplace call for greater institutional accountability by educating their colleagues about the possibilities inherent in competency-based learning models and by assisting with the evaluative efforts to implement these models.

8. An Annotated Bibliography on Competencies (Karen Paulson).
This chapter surveys the published literature and Internet-based resources on competencies. It provides a valuable touchstone for further research in this area.

INDEX.