Impacts on Teaching & Learning
and Institutional Effectiveness
A survey of higher education professionals to understand the effects of COVID-19 disruption on mission-critical processes in Spring 2020 and anticipated changes for Fall 2020 and beyond.
Ensuring student success is central to the mission of higher education in the 21st century.
When the 2019-2020 academic year began, a large majority of higher education institutions considered student learning assessment a significant priority, with institutions working to ensure student success through programs and initiatives that touch every aspect of the student experience. They worked to understand their progress toward this mission through assessment, self-study for accreditation, course evaluation and surveys, faculty review processes, and catalog and curriculum management.
COVID-19 closed higher education campuses in March 2020, creating extraordinary challenges for students, faculty, and staff. Students left campus, in-person instruction switched to remote learning nearly overnight, and institutions faced previously unknown challenges, such as finding ways to provide internet access to students whose homes didn’t have sufficient internet resources to support remote learning.
Much of what happened between March and May 2020 falls in the category of emergency response. As the initial shock fades, campuses are evaluating the impact of the crisis and asking: What has changed? And what comes next?
To better understand the new realities facing institutions, Watermark sought insight from higher education professionals regarding the impact COVID-19 is having on current and planned service to students. Conducted in May 2020, the survey focused on the effects on current and planned teaching and learning, as
well as mission-critical processes such as assessment, student feedback, faculty activity reporting and reviews, and catalog and curriculum management.
Survey respondents shed light on the impacts of the pandemic, and also suggested practices and technologies institutions can apply in the new, COVID-altered landscape to support mission-critical
processes that inform decisions and drive improvements in teaching and learning.
These findings are presented in the spirit of collaboration as we work together to effectively advance the mission of higher education: ensuring students receive the highest quality instruction and services, and ultimately go out into the world with the essential skills and specific knowledge needed for fulfilling work and meaningful engagement in society.
This national survey was conducted using EvaluationKIT by Watermark and includes responses from 858 higher education professionals representing 706 institutions across the spectrum of higher education. The respondents provided a broad range of insights that inform actionable conclusions and highlight important opportunities for further research.
858 respondents provided insight across a variety of roles, including faculty, provosts and deans, and staff involved in the work of assessment, faculty reviews, course evaluation, and curriculum and catalog management.
The 858 respondents represented 706 different institutions, representing a wide range of enrollment
sizes across 2- and 4-year institutions.
Only 7.5% of the 706 institutions represented in the survey reported having 50%+ students online before COVID-19.
In the wake of COVID-19, 47% of responding institutions reported moving all or 90%+ of their students from in-person instruction to remote learning, accomplishing this massive shift on a timeline ranging from the length of spring break to, as one respondent noted, “within 72 hours.”
The extraordinary work done by faculty and staff to convert face-to-face courses to remote learning in this emergency made something abundantly clear, as noted by one survey respondent: “What used to be thought of as teaching and learning models which would come in 5-10 years, are now needed immediately.” Support for instructors, instructional designers, and other staff involved in reimagining courses for Fall 2020 and beyond will be critical going forward.
“What used to be thought of as teaching and learning models which would come in 5-10 years, are now needed immediately.”
COVID-19 has created significant disruption at most responding institutions, but some report that they are taking advantage of this opportunity to:
“It’s interesting and heartening to see a greater awareness of our students’ needs and ensuring that we are building structures and being responsive not to who we think our students are and how they operate, but who they really are and what they really need.” – Natasha Jankowski – Executive Director National Institute of Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA)
At the start of the 2019-2020 academic year, 88.2% of respondents reported “some” to “very significant prioritization” of student learning assessment at their institutions. In the wake of COVID-19 disruption, faculty, staff, and leadership responded with an approach that focused on students’ most urgent needs, which necessarily displaced many pre-COVID priorities. In the abrupt shift to emergency remote instruction, 17% of respondents reported that their institutions temporarily reduced institutional prioritization of student learning assessment. Many respondents reported that the increased focus on service to students continues and “responsibilities shift almost daily, even as we try to move from reacting to emergent issues to anticipating upcoming issues.”
In the wake of COVID-19, 70.0% of respondents reported the same or increased prioritization of student learning assessment for Spring 2020, reflecting the importance of learning from student experiences and outcomes in Spring 2020. Yet respondents at many institutions struggled to find “ways to efficiently collect assessment data in the virtual environment, determining the impact the transition has to overall student achievement of educational outcomes.” Others reported that “there was more reliance on systems that were set in place to track, gather, and report student learning outcomes assessment data.”
Those with robust assessment systems reported confidence in their ability to maintain student learning assessment despite COVID-related disruption in Spring 2020:
“Faculty needed to transition to online learning and some required support, but all of our key measures were already in [an assessment management system]. This made the transition seamless.”
Reflecting the growing importance of student learning assessment to understand the effects of current changes, 90.6% of respondents expect the same or an increase in prioritization of student learning assessment at their institution for Fall 2020. They report the need to find “ways to efficiently collect assessment data in the virtual environment, determining the impact the transition has to overall student achievement of educational outcomes,” and “help faculty with assessment of learning outcomes in an online environment so they can be effective.”
Respondents wish to enable “faculty engagement in student learning outcomes assessment — making data collection, analysis, and reporting more efficient and meaningful for those directly responsible.”
Respondents report plans to increase their use of digital systems, with 52.0% reporting plans to use ePortfolios in Fall 2020, and 63.3% planning to use assessment management systems.
The effects of COVID-19 on Fall 2020 are already coming into focus, with survey respondents anticipating complexities in interpreting results and data from Spring 2020, and faculty expecting they will be called on to “[deal] with the fallout of students being unsuccessful in the spring semester.” Refitting courses for a fully online learning experience as well as building new online courses will offer new opportunities to establish clear learning outcomes and design courses and materials around these, ensuring students have a clear understanding of expectations, whether Fall 2020 is face-to-face, online, or a combination of modalities.
90.6% | of respondents expect the same or an increase in prioritization of student learning assessment at their institution for Fall 2020 |
|
52.0% | report plans to use ePortfolios in Fall 2020 | |
63.3% | plan to use assessment management systems |
Respondents shared that they will continue to rely on a wide range of indirect measures to assess learning, including:
Importantly, respondents also indicated plans to increase use of best practices such as direct measures (e.g., student artifacts) to assess learning. Specifically, respondents reported that:
Respondents noted that Spring 2020’s rapid turn toward digital systems has revealed important advantages:
Respondents indicated that they believe this heightened prioritization of assessment in Fall 2020 will serve students by providing the institution with insight into the efficacy of learning within the new and emerging online spaces Fall 2020 will bring.
Both the disruption and innovation in Spring 2020 offer an important opportunity for institutions to gain greater insights into student learning. Institutions should continue to prioritize the assessment of student learning to better understand what and how students are learning in order to identify areas where further support is needed, and where improvements can be made.
Survey respondents indicated that they are “pre-planning for key assessment to be addressed remotely, even for traditionally faceto-face course sections.” Respondents expect their institutions to “help faculty with assessment of learning outcomes in an online environment so that they can be effective” in delivering to students going forward.
Institutions should ensure that learning outcomes are clearly defined, that courses and curricula are designed around them, and that students have clear visibility into outcomes so they know what is expected of them and what they can expect from the course. Syllabi and other course materials play a valuable role in ensuring that outcomes are continually reinforced.
Institutions should also consider how to increase application of best practices by using direct measures to assess student learning. With all student artifacts collected through an LMS or assessment system rather than in-person, institutions have greater opportunity to use digital tools to assess direct measures of student learning at scale.
According to the 2020 Inside Higher Ed Chief Academic Officer Survey, CAOs perceive that faculty members think of assessment efforts as burdensome, with 79 percent of CAOs agreeing that faculty members at their college view assessment efforts as requiring a lot of work on their part.(1) Survey respondents see the need for a greater commitment to meaningful assessment while also recognizing the need to implement technology to make assessment more manageable for faculty:
Institutions should consider ways to streamline the assessment of learning in order to minimize the administrative burden on faculty. Many institutions are looking to adopt assessment technology, including 52% of institutions that report planning to use ePortfolios, and 63.3% that report plans to use assessment management technology, as indicated previously. A digital system should systematically capture data and artifacts, reduce administrative burden for faculty, and organize evidence for highstakes reporting, including accreditation.
79.0% | of CAOs agree that faculty members view assessment efforts as requiring a lot of work on their part |
A greater commitment to meaningful assessment will benefit current and future students while also providing rich evidence of academic quality for accreditation efforts. This will be particularly important as institutions face questions on how well they have navigated the transition to remote learning.
Institutions with assessment management technology in place report being better positioned to support self-study: “We have our HLC Year 4 Assurance Argument review due June 7, 2021. We are focused on working on our report to show that we are continuing on the path that we reported in our 2017 Reaffirmation Report. We have done well with our faculty/staff adjusting their courses, projects, assessments, and activities to meet the challenges of the distance learning required by COVID-19. We have plenty of good evidence to provide in support of our report case. None of our assessments administered within [our assessment management system] changed due to COVID-19.”
“One of the big priorities coming from this is [discovering] what worked well and what didn’t work so well, and how can we use that information going forward. We’re going to have a new normal and we don’t know exactly what that’s going to look like. We want to use that information to create what we’re thinking are going to be hybrid classes for the fall.” – Tracey Floto – Executive Director of Assessment and Accreditation Trine University
Survey respondents reported significant and increasing concern regarding accreditation, with 33.8% of respondents reporting more concern than before COVID-19 regarding collecting evidence for accreditation reports.
Just 19.6% of respondents reported that their institutions were able to maintain their pre-COVID evidence collection practices for Spring 2020.
Though accreditors have signaled a certain amount of flexibility due to COVID-19, an April 2020 survey by the Council for Higher Education Accreditation (CHEA) reported that 80% of responding accreditors are “requiring that institutions or programs continue to meet our standards, even as they operate remotely.”(2)
Survey respondents expressed the belief that while accreditors understand the complexities of Spring 2020, they can’t simply discount it, and will expect to understand both what was planned for Spring 2020 and what actually occurred. As one respondent noted: “I think there will be more flexibility for Spring 2020 as the changes came upon us so quickly. But saying that no learning outcomes assessment was done at all in Spring 2020 due to COVID-19 is not going to be a good choice for institutions to make. I believe that we must show where we made the effort where it was feasible.”
Respondents indicated that the current primary challenges for accreditation center around collecting and analyzing artifacts to provide the supporting evidence for the self-study narrative:
Respondents reported that their institutions struggled to complete field experiences amid COVID-19 closures. This is consistent with the findings of a recent American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education (AACTE) report:
With most K-12 school buildings closed, 76 percent of colleges of education surveyed by the American Association of Colleges for Teacher Education report (3) that they are working with schools to find online alternatives for some clinical placements that education students usually complete in person,” EdSurge recently reported (4).
Survey respondents reflected on this challenge:
Respondents at institutions without a digital system in place expressed concerns about their institution’s ability to “close the loop” and report evidence to support self-study:
Many respondents reported that their institution is working on accreditation reporting due within the next year. Having technology in place to support self-study and evidence collection gave respondents confidence in their institution’s ability to successfully report to an accreditor, as reflected by these respondents:
Some respondents acknowledged that their institutions lag behind best practices in capturing and reporting on learning outcomes assessment to “close the loop” and improve student outcomes: “I continue to be concerned that we collect only minimal data intended to satisfy SACSCOC standards rather than robust data truly intended to assess student learning and inform pedagogical practices.”
At a number of institutions, respondents reported that COVID-19 increased the importance “for programs to be sure students are learning what they are supposed to, regardless of modality. Assessment, particularly formative assessment throughout the life of a course, is going to become critical — and I’m just not sure we’ll have the staffing levels or culture… to give this the attention it needs.” It has also revealed how, as one respondent put it, “woefully behind we are and how far we have to go before our pending 2020-2021 self-study and visit.”
However, as seen above, institutions with digital solutions in place report greater confidence in their ability to assess student learning and provide evidence to support accreditation reporting. Institutions can use this moment to foster a student-focused culture of true student learning assessment by providing digital tools that streamline data collection and facilitate collaboration, making it easier to gain the insights needed to inform decisions as well as comply with increasingly complex accreditation requirements.
“We’ve learned a lot, in a very short time, about how technology can assist us. Now it’s like, ‘Oh, you know what? We can do this.’ We don’t have to wait for ‘someday.’” – Susan Brooks – Assistant Professor of Teaching in Education and Team Leader for the Intervention Specialist Program University of Findlay
Participating institutions in the survey indicated that 87.4% place a high priority on using student feedback to provide insight into the curriculum and student experience for institutional improvement, and for the documentation and reporting for accreditation. However, COVID-19 impacted Spring 2020 course evaluation at 51.0% of the institutions surveyed.
Notably, 95.3% of surveyed institutions proceeded with course evaluation even under these difficult circumstances.
Looking ahead, 46.0% of surveyed institutions are considering or planning to:
“We were leaning toward additional questions that would reveal or result in actionable items so that the university could actually provide the resources… if [students] have broadband, if they’re on Wi-Fi, what sort of device they have, do they have a laptop.” – Robyn Marschke – Director of Institutional Research University of Colorado – Colorado Springs
61.5% | Concerns about the context and use of responses gathered during COVID-19 | |
47.2% | Concerns about how COVID-19 may alter the data collection | |
20.1% | Using a paper-based or other method that wasn’t feasible during COVID-19 | |
7.3% | Didn’t have time or capacity to conduct course evaluations given COVID-19 restraints | |
24.1% | Other / I don’t know |
These decisions reinforce the critical value of continuing to secure actionable student feedback. As many institutions move to increase the frequency and improve their means of capturing student feedback moving forward, these institutions will be equipped with deeper, up-to-the-moment insights to improve student retention, persistence, and completion.
Importantly, respondents indicate both the importance and the need to use Spring 2020 course evaluation results within longitudinal/trend analysis. However, respondents are wisely and creatively working on how to do so with appropriate consideration of the context and impact of COVID-19. For example, one institution is planning to add “disclaimers into annual assessment reports and program reviews that Spr2020 took place during a global pandemic.”
“Rather than asking about the individual teachers, we are asking an overall teaching question, which is ‘I am satisfied with the communications received from my teachers.’ We are also asking about their satisfaction with their teaching during this period.” – Pam Jones Coordinator Surveys & Credit Arrangements Swinburne University of Technology (AU)
Use of Spring 2020 student evaluations of teaching in faculty reviews
While most institutions continued to collect student feedback, less than half (44.8%) planned to use Spring 2020 course evaluation data in faculty review processes.
“We don’t want faculty to think that we can adequately and reasonably assess the work they’ve done to modify their course to online instruction with one survey. I think what we really want to do is use this to glean information from students on how to plan for the summer and potentially the fall being online.” – Christa Smith Academic Effectiveness Analyst Washburn University
Many responding institutions recognized the need to treat Spring 2020 course evaluation results with care. Response rates have been impacted by COVID-19 disruption, as have the courses students are evaluating. While the evaluations conducted this term are measuring a completely different experience for both students and faculty, the continuity of the evaluation process is important to maintain the quality and effectiveness of the learning experience.
Take special care with any longitudinal views incorporating Spring 2020 results. Consideration within the long-term trends will be particularly important for the 59.5% of institutions that are planning to return to pre-COVID course evaluation plans for Summer/Fall 2020 and beyond.
Respondents indicated plans at some institutions to expand opportunities for students to provide feedback for Summer/ Fall 2020:
Additional course evaluations and surveys offer important opportunities to learn how students are adapting, understand the challenges they face, and determine the effectiveness of course delivery and develop plans to improve learning experiences and outcomes going forward.
Maintaining communication with students is crucial to understanding their experience of Spring 2020 and the disruption caused by COVID-19. This will remain important as institutions anticipate changes or disruptions to Summer and Fall 2020.
Course evaluation and surveying technology ensure that institutions can maintain communication with students whether they are on campus or learning remotely. Institutions should consider implementing technology that integrates with the LMS for easy access and allows students to provide feedback on their preferred device to ensure a timely and accurate understanding of their current experience as well as outcomes.
“[Our course evaluation system] allows respondents to complete surveys quickly and easily with their preferred device, usually their mobile phone. Our analytics show that nearly 50% of students use this method to complete their survey. When you tie that in with the learning management system, you… get the responses because it’s all in the system where they’re already working.” – Pam Jones Coordinator Surveys & Credit Arrangements Swinburne University of Technology (AU)
The importance of faculty teaching, research, and service remained central even as COVID-19 created a forced transition to remote instruction and committee work. In addition to a new workload for faculty of transitioning face-to-face courses to remote delivery and establishing new methods of connecting with students, the abrupt closure of campuses had important implications for research and service, as well as the tenure clock.
The impact of COVID-19 on faculty research is widespread, with 83.0% of respondents indicating that research initiatives on their campus have been disrupted to some degree. The level of disruption varied widely, based on the specific research endeavor:
The particularities of each initiative will likely determine whether and when research can resume, with field research projects such as studying bats in the wild able to continue as social distance is built into the nature of the project, while bench science and research involving live subjects are more likely to be impacted for a longer period of time. Importantly, COVID itself has opened many new avenues of research:
“It’s largely lab-based and travel-based research where our faculty are struggling and are probably going to be struggling for a while unfortunately. We have found that there are plenty of faculty who’ve also found new research streams out of the pandemic. We have some faculty who’ve already started engaging in scholarly work on what it means to be a faculty member in this situation and what it means to their teaching. So while [COVID disruption] will close some doors for people, it’s opened some other doors for some others.” – Susan Powers Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs Indiana State University
More than half (56.0%) of respondents reported that expectations regarding committee work or other types of institutional, college/school, or departmental service were impacted by COVID-19, but those impacts varied widely:
56.0% | respondents reported that faculty service to the institution was impacted by COVID-19 |
Responding to a crisis has created new opportunities for service to the institution, whether in the form of crisis management, peer-topeer training on tools for online instruction, strategic planning for Fall 2020, providing additional support to students, and more:
“We can see this seeding some things that may ultimately make the institution stronger and more responsive. There are almost no conversations these days on our campus that don’t have significant meaning. It’s a very dense time in terms of taking in information, analyzing it, trying to make sense out of it because the stakes are really high. We are taking a lot away from the level of commitment that our faculty, that our staff, our administrators and our students have shown, and trying to apply that resilience to how we build something moving forward.”
Just over half (56.1%) of survey respondents reported their institutions had completed 2019-2020 faculty review processes or were proceeding as planned prior to COVID-19. The remainder were considering and/or implementing modifications to requirements, timelines, and content of their 2019-2020 reviews.
While the completion and/or capacity of these 2019-2020 systems were able to generally withstand effects from COVID-19, two-thirds of respondents reported that their institutions’ 2020-2021 faculty review process could be impacted by COVID-19. Of the respondents from tenure-granting institutions, 41.4% had already altered their tenure deadlines and timeframes as a result of COVID-19 and/or were in the process of considering and implementing any alterations. Very few (8.0%) had determined when 2019-2020 tenure reviews would resume. COVID-19 continues to present challenges in proceeding with and completing 2019-2020 tenure reviews.
Some respondents indicate that their institutions are taking advantage of the challenging COVID-19 environment to reconsider their faculty review processes and technologies.
41.4% | had already altered their tenure deadlines and timeframes as a result of COVID-19 |
9.9% | Getting the right participants access to the right materials | 17.5% | Managing tenure review processes online |
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13.2% | Supporting committee involvement in the process |
19.5% | Responding to the impact of COVID-19 on tenure considerations |
||
16.6% | Clarifying expectations for participants | 23.2% | Keeping the process on-track relative to original deadlines |
Institutions should consider the impact of COVID-19 on timelines, sequence of steps, criteria, and required materials. Respondents reflected on the benefits of a robust online system for faculty review processes to provide continuity, a collaborative space, and documentation capacity for these processes. A digital solution also reduces the administrative burden on faculty who participate in these processes, whether as a reviewee or a reviewer. These benefits take on increased value during disruption like COVID-19, when face-to-face meetings and paper-based review of materials aren’t possible.
“We started using [a faculty activity reporting system] about a year ago and it’s going really well. Each college has some staff members and they were managing a lot of these dossiers and telling faculty they need to make copies of this, and this has to be there, and it has to be in a particular template format, and just a lot of procedural technicalities. [Going] electronic really takes out a lot of that noise. It turns out that it’s actually saving a lot of heartache.” – Robyn Marschke Director of Institutional Research University of Colorado – Colorado Springs
Of particular impact to the offices of Provost and Registrar, COVID-19 continues to have an emerging impact on the policies and process of institutions.
Nearly two-thirds (63.3%) of respondents indicated that COVID-19 has led them to consider and/or implement changes to grading policies for Spring 2020. Given the changes in grading at many institutions, 40.1% of institutions have or are considering reevaluation and adaptation to policies for transfer-in of external credits.
Nearly two-thirds of respondents indicated that COVID-19 has led them to consider and/or implement changes to grading policies for Spring 2020.
As institutions consider implementing new/adapted transfer-in policies, care should be taken to document both the decision-making process as well as the policies resulting from the process. This will not only provide the institution with documentation for regulatory bodies as to this specific change, but also provide a framework for the institution to make revisions to these policies in response to future disruption. It may also be useful to consider a software solution to facilitate change processes. This serves two purposes: eliminating the need for in-person communication and capturing the documentation needed for accreditation and other accountability reporting. This has the added benefit of eliminating the need to store paper records.
A quarter (25%) of respondents reported that their institutions had previously completed their 2020 catalog publication, and only 1.5% of respondents anticipated a significant delay due to COVID-19. However, it is important to note that nearly one-third (28.1%) were still determining the impact of COVID-19 on their 2020 catalog publication schedule. All (100%) of the responding institutions that are currently making their catalog available to students exclusively via print copy reported they are “very likely” to adopt a digital catalog solution for 2020-2021.
Digital catalog solutions and delivery will be key to serving students in the future, providing more adaptability and flexibility in service to the student as well as clearer processes for catalog production and documentation for regulatory compliance. This is particularly valuable for ensuring catalog production when the workplace is disrupted as it has been in Spring 2020, in anticipation of possible COVID-related disruptions in Fall 2020 and beyond.
Perhaps more importantly in this era of uncertainty, a digital catalog solution allows real-time updates to online catalogs, ensuring the ability to keep students informed of crisis-related changes.
“If you’re like me, normally you think of the catalog as the Bible: ‘We launched it in August and there are no changes.’ That’s definitely not the case for the spring term. We began to adjust policies as we added a lot of experimental courses in the middle of the term that we previously would have never touched in the catalog.” – Rodney Parks University Registrar and Assistant Vice President Elon University
COVID-19 did not appear to have a major impact on 2019-2020 curriculum review and revision, with 69.6% of responding institutions reporting no change and another 12.1% indicating only extensions of deadlines for submission/approval of curriculum review and revisions. However, 43.3% of institutions report experiencing COVID-related challenges in accomplishing this, with 20.0% of respondents reporting difficulty engaging process participants digitally, and 26.3% reporting difficulty keeping the process on track relative to deadlines.
43.3% | of institutions report experiencing COVID-related challenges with curriculum review and revision |
Institutions should consider how curriculum review processes can proceed within remote work environments. A digital curriculum management solution can provide virtual meeting spaces and document faculty-led decision-making, a more urgent need as faculty navigate the changes and additions to the curriculum prompted by preparing for multiple instructional scenarios for Fall 2020. In addition, a digital solution captures critical evidence for accreditation and external requirements as well as internal continuity and sustainability as department chair positions rotate and new faculty are hired.
The syllabus has traditionally been viewed as something of a contractual agreement between student and instructor. As such, it is a document that generally does not undergo major changes throughout a term. The role of the syllabus to communicate and reinforce the learning outcomes for a given course, providing students with a clear understanding of expectations, has become even more important during COVID-related disruption.
However, COVID also fundamentally challenged the nature of the syllabus as a rigid contract, illuminating the need for more flexibility to respond to a changing educational landscape. As a result, 41.7% of respondents cited an urgent need for within-term alterations to syllabi.
Establish new policies and tools for updating syllabi
To proceed with best practices and to comply with accreditation, institutions should consider and develop policy and processes for identifying in-term syllabi change needs, developing and implementing the changes, and documenting both the process and the results. A dedicated syllabus management system can help to standardize the process of updating policies across relevant syllabi, ensure syllabi are distributed to students in a consistent fashion, and systematically capture multiple versions of syllabi to support accreditation reporting.
The road ahead for higher education is complicated by the uncertainties surrounding COVID-19. Will institutions be open for face-to-face instruction in Fall 2020? Can hybrid models of instruction keep students safe on campus? Will the pandemic require a continuation of fully remote instruction? And what are the implications for faculty and staff? While grappling with these essential questions, institutions must also sustain the critical campus processes that ensure student success and institutional effectiveness: assessment, self-study for accreditation, course evaluation and surveys, faculty review processes, and catalog and
curriculum management.
Survey respondents shared insights into the effects of COVID-19 on these mission-critical processes in Spring 2020, as well as their understanding of how the pandemic will affect their institutions in Fall 2020 — and likely beyond. Their responses point to some clear opportunities for higher education in the months ahead. Institutions can work to achieve the intrinsically linked goals of student success and institutional effectiveness by:
Since COVID-19 abruptly closed campuses in March 2020, higher education has shown its extraordinary strengths in abundance through collegiality and collaboration. Across webinars, listservs, articles, blog posts, podcasts, and other forums, higher education professionals have generously shared information and supported each other through the move to emergency remote instruction, while also working to understand the impacts on teaching and learning, and their implications for a future that’s hard to predict.
We are particularly grateful to all who shared their experiences of Spring 2020 and expectations for Fall 2020 and beyond through this survey. We hope that these findings provide actionable insights that help institutions support student success and sustain mission-critical processes despite the ongoing challenges presented by the pandemic.
It’s a challenging time for higher education — and will likely remain so for the foreseeable future. These key action items can ensure that institutions are able to sustain the critical campus processes that ensure student success and institutional effectiveness: assessment, self-study for accreditation, course evaluation and surveys, faculty review processes, and catalog and curriculum management.
Increase the focus on assessment and core learning outcomes, and evaluate these through direct measures, such as student artifacts, when possible
Maintain focus on self-study to support regional and programmatic accreditation requirements
Expand the use of course evaluation and student surveys to better understand student experiences in a changed learning environment
Adapt campus policy, including the tenure clock, in response to the implications of the pandemic on faculty research and service.
Address the impact of COVID-19 on policies and processes for the offices of Provost and Registrar
Adopt and integrate software on campus to support mission-critical processes with data to inform decision making, provide evidence for accreditation, and ensure student success
As with many things in higher education, this survey and report are the result of collaboration with many professionals who shared their insights and expertise. We especially wish to thank these contributors.
Ben Moll, Ed.D.
President and Founder
Still Creek Insight – Strategy, Analytics, Learning
Natasha A. Jankowski, Ph.D.
Executive Director
National Institute of Learning Outcomes Assessment (NILOA)
Patrick Tucker
Registrar
Central Connecticut State University
Theresa Umscheid Zeigler
Executive Director
Iowa Community College Online Consortium
who informed our understanding of the effect of the pandemic on mission-critical processes in higher education
Bliss Adkison
Associate Director for Academic Affairs
and SACSCOC Liaison
University of Northern Alabama
Jessica Allen
Tk20 Unit Administrator and Instructor
Henderson State University
Miranda Arnold
Coordinator of Local Field Experiences
Liberty University
Susan Brooks
Assistant Professor of Teaching in Education and
Team Leader for the Intervention Specialist Program
University of Findlay
Lynn Marie Burks, Ph.D.
National Dean, Faculty/Center For
Teaching Excellence, Senior Professor
Center for Teaching Excellence
DeVry University
Lesley Cooper, Ed.D.
Director of Institutional Effectiveness & Assessment
Kankakee Community College
Dirk Davis, Ed.D.
Associate Vice President of Academics
and Professor of Education
California Baptist University
Tracey Floto
Executive Director of Assessment and Accreditation
Trine University
Pam Jones
Coordinator
Surveys & Credit Arrangements
Swinburne University of Technology (AU)
Robyn Marschke, Ph.D.
Director of Institutional Research
University of Colorado – Colorado Springs
Don Moonshine, J.D.
Curriculum Management Project Manager
University of California – Santa Cruz
Kathryn Norwood, Ed.D.
Professor of Education
California Baptist University
Shannan Palomba
Assessment Coordinator
Gonzaga University
Rodney L. Parks, Ph.D.
University Registrar and Assistant Vice President
Elon University
Susan M. Powers, Ed.D
Associate Vice President for Academic Affairs
Indiana State University
Brandon Shields
Associate Director, Assessment and Accreditation
Kent State University
Christa Smith
Academic Effectiveness Analyst
Washburn University
Heather Tillberg-Webb, Ph.D.
Associate Vice President of Academic Resources
& Technology
Southern New Hampshire University
James V. Vitagliano
Assistant Dean of Enrollment Services/Registrar
MGH Institute of Health Professions
Jody Waters, Ph.D.
Associate Provost and Director of Graduate Studies
Southern Oregon University
Dr. Christine Widdall, Ph.D.
Associate Professor & Watermark and edTPA Coordinator
State University of New York – Cortland
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