Back to School – ABC’s of Assessment

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by Dr. Kristin Walker, Clemson University

It’s hard to believe the start of the fall semester is looming.  I know my local stores and ads are shouting “back to school!”  Many of us may have been involved with orientation in a variety of capacities while perhaps counseling students this summer, closing out data from the previous year, and preparing for a new academic year.  Oh yes – and we’re trying to recharge our batteries.  Collective deep breath – inhale and exhale.

All of this back to school chatter got me thinking how it’s also a “back to basics” time for assessment.  Hopefully I didn’t undo that collective inhale and exhale because we got this!  Whether you formally oversee assessment efforts in your area, are part of a committee, or do some individual, informal assessment on programs, events, and/or services, I thought I would share some things that help me prep myself and our center for the new academic and reporting year.

A – Analyze, Ask, and Apply

It’s important to take time to analyze and report data to stakeholders as well as apply the data to the coming year.  To apply, we need to ask questions first.  Can discussions occur about current practices or operations that could be tweaked?  Can counseling hours be adjusted?  Are students requesting specific informational resources be on hand at fairs or networking events?  Are there lingering questions based on last year’s data that need to be further explored with focus groups or interviews?  Can you change a question to be open-ended to learn more without having to coordinate a focus group?  Are evening and weekend workshops yielding the turnout that warrants having a counselor work after hours?  Are there any majors who aren’t seeing as much come to your office?  Are students saying they want more information during counseling on a topic but staff may have forgotten a valuable resource exists on the website?  Or is it possible to bring in a campus partner to retrain staff?  There are plenty of questions that can arise when examining data.  It’s important to carve out the necessary time to bring together the right folks to brainstorm and determine if a pivot is necessary that could improve operations, learning outcomes, etc… Ask the questions.  Don’t leave out ideas.  Identify a potential solution to try for a year and discuss next summer or after the fall semester how it went.  Adjustments don’t have to be permanent.

B – Bolster, Balance, and Believe

You’ve analyzed and identified ways to make some changes.  You now need to determine the best way to bolster your current data collection methods to determine if the changes yielded a positive outcome.  If a survey provided the data to prompt the conversation and make a change, can you revise a question?  If you altered a schedule or developed targeted outreach efforts can you more regularly check data collected by card swipes?  If you’ve developed a new event entirely to address a need, you may need to develop a new way to collect data to determine effectiveness.  Remember surveys aren’t always the answer!  Can you get creative with a two minute assessment using pencil and paper that can give you a clearer picture with a higher response rate?  Regardless of what you do, balance new efforts and tools with existing ones.  Don’t’ overwhelm yourself or your colleagues.  Are there graduate assistants, interns, or peer ambassadors that can help you analyze data and give them a real world project?  Remember certain things may not require assessing every year.  Developing a multi-year schedule could be beneficial.  Finally, if you are relying on others to help collect data, make sure they believe in the data you’re attempting to gather.  Help colleagues understand why the data matters, how it will be used to inform the future, and when it will be shared with colleagues.  Is it possible to bring together everyone or in small groups to share data at year end or when it makes sense during the year.  Timely data can be helpful!  Assessment can take a village, but understanding why there’s value and letting them see how data has informed decisions can help them believe and get on board.

C – Celebrate, Carry On, and Commit  

We must take the time to celebrate accomplishments, student stories of success, collaborations with campus partners that have proven fruitful, and where we’ve moved needles.  As my supervisor says, we do important work in career services.  We have the honor and privilege of working with a variety of students at such an important time in their lives.  Even though I love data, everything can’t be just data.  Celebrate how we felt when working with stakeholders, how the energy at a corporate partner retreat felt, or how a space felt when we reconfigured it?  People get excited when hard work is noticed, especially if being okay with a change or an adjustment wasn’t that exciting last year or semester.  After celebrating it’s time to “keep calm and carry on” before the students return because we can’t lose the energy.  But carry on doesn’t mean business as usual.  Commit to the things that are important for your respective office.  Commit to the tweaks discussed and owned by everyone.  Commit to challenging ourselves like we encourage students to challenge themselves.  We owe our students and stakeholders our best.

 

I hope these ABC’s may have sparked an idea about something each of us can do whether you work independently in this area or with others in a variety of ways.  Assessment can be intimidating, so it’s all in the delivery and attitude.  We may have been the children who was so excited to return to school or we may have been the ones who felt apprehensive.  Could be we have mixed feelings in us and/or our colleagues.  Regardless, if we take time for a deep breath and realize we share the same passion for our work, everything else will fall into place.  We’ll find our cubby, locker, or seat and smile at the school year ahead.

__________

Kristin has 15 years of experience in education and fraternity/sorority life.  She earned her B.S. in English from Radford University, and her M.Ed. in Counselor Education and Ph.D. in Educational Leadership from Clemson University.  Kristin currently serves as the Associate Director of Analytics and Initiatives at Clemson University’s Center for Career and Professional Development.  In addition to coordinating the center’s competency initiatives and assessment, she oversees the graduate and off-campus internship area.  Kristin teaches in Clemson’s masters and doctoral programs and has been a volunteer and board member of her sorority, Alpha Sigma Tau.  Through her professional and volunteer roles, Kristin has traveled to and worked with students at over 40 college campuses.  Her research interests include career development, fraternity/sorority life, and STEM education.  

Megan Downey, 2017 New Professional Award Recipient

The New Professional Award may be presented to SoACE members with no more than five years of experience in the profession who have demonstrated significant contributions to career services and/or recruitment. It is meant to recognize “future leaders” within the association.  Contribution may be to the association, a state association, NACE, or through direct activities as a part of their normal employment.  These activities must show innovation, reflect foresight, and display promise that the individual has the unique quality of future leadership. Megan Downey, Assistant Director for Career Professionalism at UNC Charlotte, was presented with this award at the 2017 Annual Conference in San Antonio.

Megan was nominated by Patrick Madsen, University Career Center Director at UNC Charlotte, who wrote:

Megan Downey has been in the profession for nearly 2 years and has proven to be innovative, engaged and interested in a leadership path. She has shown great initiative when it comes to solving problems at our university. She helped create an opportunity to provide scholarships for students who are in unpaid internships and in its first offering will be able to fund 6-10 students. She participated in the North Carolina ACE Leadership Institute her first year in the profession and is now one of the coordinators for next year’s Institute. These sessions are geared towards building professional skills in leading and managing a career office. You could say Megan is just doing her job, or does a lot of work, but it is more than that. She is engaging with the job and the university, seeing a problem and doing something about it without waiting to be told what to do. Megan has demonstrated a clear sense of direction for our profession and a purpose in helping students who are ready to build a career brand.

Megan has served as the Assistant Director for Career Professionalism and Career Advisor for the College of Computing and Informatics at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte for the past two years. In her role, Megan advises students while overseeing the Career Meet Up Program, the Professional Clothing Closet on campus, and other programming initiatives.

Before coming to UNC Charlotte, Megan worked at Florida State University as a Graduate Assistant for Employer Relations and On-Campus Recruiting. Megan received her Master of Science degree in Higher Education and holds a Bachelor of Arts Degree in Psychology from the University of Toledo, where she was heavily involved in Greek Life and other campus organizations.

On a personal note, Megan is from Ann Arbor, Michigan where she developed her passion for collegiate athletics, volunteering in her community, community activism.

 

Don’t Miss This Week’s SoACE Technology Boot Camp! No Burpees Required!

Please join us this week for our Second Annual SoACE Summer Technology Boot Camp! Please see below for the schedule of events. Please register for each session you would like to attend individually. Each session is free and is limited to the first 100 participants so please only register for those sessions which you plan to attend and watch with your colleagues when possible.

WEDNESDAY, JULY 18 (all times CDT):

9:00 – 10:00 a.m.
CareerShift Best Practices
Presenters: Audrey Key & Val Matta
We all coach our students and alumni on how to build their network, but CareerShift allows them to go the extra mile. Because CareerShift aggregates job postings and company info into one website, the student can research a company much more effectively. Learn how CareerShift can help your students and alumni complete a painless confidential job search.
REGISTER

10:30 – 11:30 a.m.
Achieving Organization through Asana
Presenter: Katlyn Kurtz
The time of using summer as a way to breathe and get prepared for the next academic year is gone, but that doesn’t mean that higher education professionals have to spend their entire year playing catch up. Asana is a project management tool that can help you get and stay organized from the first day of class until graduation.This webinar will demonstrate the power of Asana and will help participants understand how they can use the tool to benefit their project workflow. This webinar will also show participants how to add team members to projects and tasks, create start dates and due dates, and view tasks assigned to them at a quick glance. This session will review the key differences between the free and paid versions of Asana and help participants make decisions about which option best supports their use.
REGISTER

12:30 – 1:30 p.m.
Marketing Pays:  Overcoming a Challenge and Showing Them Who Can Handle It
Presenter: Tara Stevenson
What happens when your institution says, “Guess what?  You’re moving off the beaten path to a new physical location!” Fear sets in, you get the shakes and start sweating as you imagine what your office will be like when leave your current comfort zone and journey into a land unknown.  The Career Development Center at Flagler College was charged with accomplishing this exact feat during the 2017-2018 academic year in addition to taking the plunge into a new CRM platform. In the session, we will take a look at a variety of marketing strategies our office utilized to showcase our physical and virtual moves to not only maintain student interaction in a new location but achieve a 50% increase in traffic through the building.  Strategies and topics to be discussed include:
– Developing Instagram posts and stories to engage viewers in the move
– Documenting student interface with the new location and operating system
– Branding everything with the office name
– Incentive programs utilizing student leaders
– Nontraditional events to continue building the brand of the new office
REGISTER

2:00 – 3:00 p.m.
I’m No Graphic Designer, but I “Design Graphics”: Understanding the Basics
Presenter: Leslie Neal
University Career Centers are establishing brand recognition to identify their importance in the professional development of today’s graduates. In order to accomplish this, marketing initiatives have been implemented nationwide. As these efforts increase, it is important to distinguish between marketing and graphic design. These terms are not interchangeable, but separate entities that complement each other. Although creativity influences marketing, the ability to visually communicate in a clear and concise manner does require basic design skills. Graphic Design plays a vital role in marketing, and by understanding some fundamental principles of design, the production of cohesive marketing elements can be created.

With the high demand on visual identity through social media, web design, posters, infographics, banners, brochures, pens, t-shirts (and the list goes on), it is imperative to produce quality promotional pieces effectively and efficiently by incorporating vector graphics (digital images) within marketing materials. However, a lot of professionals charged with this responsibility lack a formal background in Graphic Design to successfully execute certain techniques such as these. If you are the Graphic Designer of your organization who desires to learn how to use vector images, this webinar is for you! We’ll discuss some basic design principles, the significance of vector graphics, and how to create your own. You may not be a Graphic Designer by trade, but you will be well on your way to properly designing graphics in no time!
REGISTER

THURSDAY, JULY 19 (all times CDT):

9:00 a.m. – 10:00 a.m.
Career Center Marketing: Increase Reach While Cutting Costs
Kelli Gemmer, Florida State University
An important communication challenge in higher education is reaching students through the cluttered media environment that exists on campuses. From the moment they are welcomed on campus and throughout their college journey, students are presented with a flood of information. How can career center marketers navigate this environment to reach their student audience?
REGISTER

10:30 – 11:30 a.m.
If We are More Connected Than Ever, Why Aren’t We Happier?
Presenter: Sonia Gonzalez
If we are more connected than ever, why are we not happier? This session will discuss the increased interconnectivity through technology and social media platformed, juxtaposed by the idea that society as a whole is lonelier, more isolated, and depressed than ever. We will also discuss the difficulty of interacting with others or making new connections when everyone has their faces in their screens. Dive into the feelings of inadequacy and/or insecurity that can be a side effect of this hyperconnectivity and constant comparison on social media. Receive tips to limit social media reliance and seek out meaningful personal interactions and relationships for participants and their students, alumni, and staff.
REGISTER

1:00 – 2:30 p.m.
Building Your Own Badging Program
Presenters: Peter Thorsett & Katlyn Kurtz
Using an interactive workbook, this session will outline the key steps in creating an effective badging program for students. Participants will be guided through an exercise to help them develop a badging program at their institution. This session will highlight how the desired educational outcomes of a badging program influence the overall program design. Specific technology considerations that should be kept in mind when developing a badging program will be discussed. This session will also give participants insight into the benefits and drawbacks of using a tool like Badgr and how it impacts how students earn and use badges outside of the program.
REGISTER

Questions? Please contact Kelly Atwood, SoACE Technology Boot Camp Coordinator.

Can’t make some of the sessions? All SoACE members have access to view archived webinars on the SoACE website. Simply log in and view all webinar archives by going to Resources > Workshops and Webinars > Archived Webinars. Most webinars are available online within a few days.