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Assessing Undergraduate Learning in Psychology

Strategies for Measuring and Improving Student Performance
Publication date: August 2020

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Overview

This book shows how to develop assessments that undergraduate psychology faculty and administrators can use when designing pedagogies, courses, and curricula around student learning goals, including those identified by APA’s Guidelines for the Undergraduate Psychology Major.

The contributors are veteran educators who offer expert advice for addressing assessment‑driven pressures from individual and institutional stakeholders. They also discuss international pressures as education programs around the world become more interconnected, which requires global cooperation and harmonization.

Using illustrative case examples, the authors provide strategies for assessing students’ learning, developing institutional assessment plans, and building bridges across institutions and international borders.

In addition, they highlight the limitations of assessment, encouraging flexibility in determining what to assess and how to act on and communicate the resulting data. They encourage active, thoughtful engagement to improve student learning, and ensure that today’s students are ready to compete in the global economy.

Table of contents

Contributors

Introduction: Assessment Assessment Everywhere—And What Are We to Think?
Susan A. Nolan, Christopher M. Hakala, and R. Eric Landrum

I. Institutional Approaches

  1. Scholarship of Teaching and Learning and Assessment: Advancing a Collaborative Model
    Regan A. R. Gurung
  2. A Framework for Setting Educational Priorities
    Melissa Beers
  3. The Sound and Fury of Academic Program Reviews: What They Reveal about Assessment and Accountability
    Jane S. Halonen and Dana S. Dunn
  4. Replacing the Term Formative Assessment: A Modest Proposal
    Rob McEntarffer
  5. How to Create a Culture of Assessment
    Jason S. Todd and Elizabeth Yost Hammer
  6. Overcoming Obstacles That Stop Student Learning: The Bottleneck Model of Structural Reform
    Claudia J. Stanny
  7. Backward Design, the Science of Learning, and the Assessment of Student Learning
    Catherine E. Overson and Victor A. Benassi

II. Individual Approaches

  1. Assessment as a Pedagogical Science: A Stealthy Approach to Studying Effective Teaching
    Bridgette Martin Hard
  2. Evidence-Based Teaching and Course Design: Using Data to Develop, Implement, and Refine University Courses
    Danae L. Hudson
  3. A Taxonomy for Assessing Educational Change in Psychology
    Raymond J. Shaw
  4. Using Formative Self-Assessment to Improve Teaching and Learning in Educational Psychology Courses
    Eva Seifried and Birgit Spinath

III. International Approaches

  1. Assessing Learning Outcomes in Undergraduate Psychology Education: Lessons Learned From Five Countries
    Jacquelyn Cranney, Julie A. Hulme, Julia Suleeman, Remo Job, and Dana S. Dunn
  2. Applying the Assessment Design Decisions Framework Internationally
    Jacquelyn Cranney, Dana S. Dunn, and Suzanne C. Baker
  3. Measuring the Generic Skills of Higher Education Students and Graduates: Implementation of CLA+ International
    Doris Zahner, Dirk Van Damme, Roger Benjamin, and Jonathan Lehrfeld
  4. Interdisciplinary Innovations in Formative and Summative Assessment: The Beliefs, Events, and Values Inventory; VALUE Rubrics; and the Cultural Controllability Scale
    Kris Acheson, Ashley Finley, Louis Hickman, Lee Sternberger, and Craig Shealy

Afterword: What's Next?
Susan A. Nolan, Christopher M. Hakala, and R. Eric Landrum

Index

About the Editors

Contributor bios

Susan A. Nolan, PhD, is a psychology professor at Seton Hall University, New Jersey. She has taught numerous courses, including abnormal psychology, international psychology, introduction to psychology, and statistics. She has also coauthored several statistics and introduction to psychology textbooks.

Dr. Nolan has served as a United Nations representative for APA for several years and researched international psychology education in Bosnia and Herzegovina as a U.S. Fulbright Scholar. She also studies the education and careers of women and men in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields.

Susan Nolan lives in South Orange, New Jersey.

Chris Hakala, PhD, is a psychology professor and the director of the Center for Excellence in Teaching, Learning, and Scholarship at Springfield College, Massachusetts. His research has focused on reading comprehension, teaching and learning, effective faculty development and assessment, and best practices in the classroom.

He has been invited to present at many conferences around the country as well as dozens of colleges and universities on topics ranging from reading narrative text to how to effectively manage large classes, or how to engage students in ways that maximize student learning.

Chris Hakala lives in Springfield, Massachusetts.

R. Eric Landrum, PhD, is a professor and chair of the Department of Psychological Science at Boise State University, Idaho. He has taught multiple courses, including general psychology, introduction to the psychology major, statistical methods, research methods, and psychological measurements.

Dr. Landrum’s research interests center on educational issues and facilitating student success. He is the author of Undergraduate Writing in Psychology, Revised Edition (2012) and has won multiple teaching awards, including the American Psychological Foundation’s Charles L. Brewer Distinguished Teaching of Psychology award in 2019.

Eric Landrum lives in Boise, Idaho.

Visit his website and follow @ericlandrum on Twitter.

Book details
Format: Paperback
Publication date: August 2020
ISBN: 978-1-4338-3227-7
Item #: 4311042
Pages: 278

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