Q: What were the driving forces or factors behind that need for a technology solution for the Gen Ed assessment at Molloy?
A: Our institution adopted a new program and general education assessment model that is using student artifacts. Starting fresh with a new assessment model and committee structure provided us with the opportunity to review all our assessment practices, including general education. After establishing clear ownership of general education, we reviewed and updated our learning outcomes, and then the question became, how are we going to measure it and provide the data to continually improve? This is where the technology played a critical role in our success to remain as efficient and effective at assessment. Our goal was to minimize the number of standalone technology solutions, take advantage of much-needed connections, and, where possible, leverage familiar environments that would allow faculty and administration to adopt and embrace the tool much quicker. With Anthology Collective Review, we were able to expand our use of an already familiar solution to a college-wide adoption and streamline the data collection, analysis, and reporting used by faculty, deans, and chairs. This driving force demonstrated to faculty how their work is being used to help improve student learning and inform our perspectives around students’ college and career readiness.