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The Fractal World of Student Engagement
26th Annual Georgia Perimeter College Mathematics Conference
February 15, 2013
Patricia (Patti) Gregg, Ph.D.Acting Director
GPC Office of Institutional Research and Planning
Our students have such varied backgrounds and
life experiences, is it really possible to
understand them?
If it were impossible, we wouldn’t have dozens of commercial surveys on the market, but ….
If it were easy, we wouldn’t have dozens of commercially available surveys on the market!
Measurement Tools: The National Surveys
The “Grandaddy of them all”
• CIRP Freshman Surveyhttp://www.heri.ucla.edu/cirpoverview.php
The Heirs Apparent
• National Survey of Student Engagementhttp://nsse.iub.edu/
• Community College Survey of Student Engagementhttp://www.ccsse.org/
• Survey of Entering Student Engagementhttp://www.ccsse.org/sense/
The Also-Rans• College Student Experiences Questionnaire
(CSEQ)http://cseq.iub.edu/cseq_generalinfo.cfm
• College Student Expectations Questionnaire (CSXQ)http://cseq.iub.edu/csxq_generalinfo.cfm
• Community College Student Experiences Questionnairehttp://www.memphis.edu/cshe/ccseq.php
While they each have slightly different emphases and/or target audiences, the common approach of all these surveys is to ask about
specific behaviors rather than general opinions. They
“operationalize” engagement.
What do the findings tell us?
Generally, institutions receive a report that shows the frequency distribution of responses to each survey item, along with benchmark data from the national sample for comparative purposes. Depending upon the survey, the comparison group might be based on institutional type or size. In most cases, the survey publishers define the comparison group, not the institution.
But unless your institution is made up entirely of
you probably want to know how particular groups of students responded.
Most of the big national surveys will provide your institution with the raw data file, so that your Institutional Research office can do further analysis of the responses based on factors that are important to you.
At GPC we look at the usual demographic “suspects” (Age, Gender, Race/Ethnicity) as well as Campus, Major, Full/Part-time Status and SCH-earned.
Sample CCSSE Findings - EngagementIn a typical 7-day week, 80.0% of all survey respondents spent no
time participating in college-sponsored activities:As expected, full-time students were more likely than part-time
students to participate in activities.Across ethnic groups, Black students were most likely (24.6%)
and White students least likely (13.7%) to participate in activities.
Regarding other extra- or co-curricular activities, 60.2% of all
survey respondents said that within the past year they never attended an art exhibit or performance, and 42.4% never exercised or participated in physical fitness activities:
Black students were most likely (15.5%) and White students least likely (10.4%) to attend cultural events “Very Often” or “Often.”
White students were most likely (41.6%) and Hispanic students least likely (23.9%) to exercise “Very Often” or “Often.”
Can these surveys be scaled down for just my department or even just my class?
Absolutely! The most important idea to keep in mind is to ask your questions in a way that operationalizes the behaviors or experiences that are most relevant to your situation. Keep in mind that when students are not anonymous, they are less likely to answer sensitive questions candidly. Only gather information you can actually act upon.
Oh and by the way …
“Engagement” doesn’t always have to be all
We want our students to be engaged intellectually as well!
One tool we are using at GPC is the Critical Thinking Assessment Test (CAT)
Let’s stay engaged with one another! I welcome your questions and comments, from the abstract to the concrete, and all points in between.
Georgia Perimeter CollegeOffice of Institutional Research and Planning1975 Lakeside Parkway, Suite 350-BTucker GA 30084