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Carnegie Corporation of New York Fall 2007
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The Collegiate Learning Assessment measures competencies critical for success in higher education and in the real world for which students are presumably being prepared. Without question, Stephen Klein acknowledges, “One test can’t do everything.” At the same time, he insists, “Because you can’t measure everything doesn’t mean you can’t measure anything.” Overcoming Inertia—and Fear At a daylong meeting of the Ivies, called by the Teagle Foundation to discuss the topic of establishing the proper balance between teaching and research, W. Robert Connor, president of the Teagle Foundation, reports that the word “assessment” came up at 4:15 p.m. The word “assessment,” he explains, is “very rarely used at these meetings.” The emergence of still another standardized test—this time at the higher education level—has not inspired universal enthusiasm within that community. As Conner observes, for the Collegiate Learning Assessment, it’s not so much a case of swimming against the tide but of “struggling to over-come a huge mass of inertia.” Richard Hersh puts it a bit more bluntly: Higher education, he declares, is “the only industry in which competitors are rated on the caliber of their customers rather than on their product...”1 It is precisely because the American system of higher education has long been regarded as world class that it is diffi cult to make the case for the need to assess student learning, particularly among highly selective institutions. These are the very same institutions, after all, that helped establish America’s reputation for excellence in higher education in the fi rst place. Comments such as the following tend to support Hersh’s observation: “You could put every Harvard student in a subterranean vault for four years, and they’d still grow,”2 said one Harvard professor. Roger Benjamin says that such comments refl ect “the argument of the top schools” which are fearful that “they would be penalized because there would be less growth to demonstrate.” Hersh, however, disputes the notion that comparing the value added of highly selective colleges would produce a limited amount of value added, pointing out that “[No] such ‘ceiling effect’ has been found in the Collegiate Learning Assessment national data sample,” which includes highly selective schools.3 1 Richard H. Hersh, “What Does College Teach?”
The Atlantic Monthly, November 2005. |