Tuesday, December 17, 2013

Assessing the Assessors: J-School Standards

Most academic fields go through some kind accreditation. Journalism is no different. Schools don't have to be accredited, of course. It's optional, but most (but certainly not all) of the top j-school programs are accredited through ACEJMC.

An article in the latest Journalism and Mass Communication Educator, just in my mailbox today, gives those assessed a chance to assess the assessors. And yes, I had great fun writing that sentence. You can read the abstract here to get the gist of the survey of administrators asking them to critique the infamous nine standards for accreditation.

Before we go any further, let's lay out those nine standards. It's hard to argue with many of them. I'll lay them out below and provide simplified results from the article.



Standard
% Good As Is
1
Mission, Governance, and Admin
86.2
2
Curriculum & Instruction
32.3
3
Diversity and Inclusiveness
47.7
4
Full-time & Part-Time Faculty
73.0
5
Scholarship & Pro Activity
67.7
6
Student Services
95.3
7
Resources, Facilities, & Equipment
82.8
8
Professional and Public Service
78.1
9
Assessment of Learning Outcomes
50.8


As you can see above, folks are not keen about Curriculum. Forty percent say it needs "major changes" (not in table). Also down on the list is assessment of learning outcomes (let's face it, this sucks to make work) and diversity (scary that it's so low). The curriculum complaint is mainly about the liberal arts requirement, but in general people find this standard to work against a more nimble, exploratory curriculum. As the authors note, "attempting to develop a one-size-fits-all academic standard is complex." When that happens, no one is truly happy.


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