REGULAR MEETING OF THE UNIVERSITY FACULTY SENATE
Minutes
104 Gore Hall
Members Excused: J. Bernard, V. Misange, R. Morgan, J. Stoner, C. Thoroughgood
The meeting was convened by Senate President Charles Boncelet. President Boncelet informed the Senate of the passing of Dr. Kenneth Koford who was a long time member of the Senate. A moment of silence was observed in Dr. Koford’s memory.
I. The Agenda was approved unanimously.
II.
The meeting minutes of
III.
Remarks by Provost Dan Rich: Provost Rich began by announcing the
The Provost also informed the
Senate that the
A Symposium starting next Saturday will be a full week of celebration of the Paul Jones exhibition. All are invited to come out and observe the exhibit.
The Provost talked of a magazine called “The Scientist” that did an assessment of the best places to work in the world for life scientists. The U of D ranked in the top ten along with Cornell, Perdue, U of Jerusalem, etc.
November activities will be announced in Udaily. The Provost asked the Senate to keep up with all the activities coming in November.
Jeff Jordan – Multicultural Issues. Jeff informed the Senate that 3 years ago the need for recertification surfaced and the work began last year before he became the UGS Chairperson. Jeff informed the Senate of the tremendous amount of work done by the Undergraduate Studies Committee last year including two open hearings. Jeff passed out documents containing the 1987 resolution passed by the Faculty Senate, and informed the Senate of a new plan for recertification. He told the senate that there has been no recertification since 1987. Jeff walked the Senate through the five year plan which is to recertify this year, and five years down the road recertify again. Every five years recertification by the UGS Cte. The UGS Cte. was given this authority in the 1987 resolution passed by the Senate. There are 217 courses that need to be recertified explained Jeff.
The plan is as follows:
The Recertification Plan: Five Major Points
1. Initial 5-year period following certification.
2. Well constructed assessment study required as evidence.
· “The intent was (is) to measure the level of success achieved in reaching these outcomes through course evaluations.”
· “The committee felt that it was a faculty member’s responsibility to come up with assessment criteria, perhaps with help from CTE.”
3. Decertification unless resubmitted for review.
4. Review by UGS as to recertification, decertification, or 2-year conditional recertification pending further assessment.
5. A course will be recertified if and only if evidence can be presented that provides reason to think that three of five criteria are met (after the five year initial period):
C1. Students have acquired a significantly
greater understanding of the cultural or ethnic diversity of the people of the
C2. Students have acquired a significantly greater understanding of the world religions and cultures.
C3. Students have acquired a significantly greater understanding of the behavior of individuals from other cultures and ethnic backgrounds.
C4. Students have used the ideas the class has generated about the cultures it considers to deepen their understanding of their own ethnic and cultural background, beliefs, and values.
C5. Students are able to use their understanding of ethnic, cultural, or religious differences to inform their own behavior and decisions to a significantly greater degree.
Jeff explained that these five criteria have generated a lot of concerns and his committee has tried to address these. “We have the five
criteria based on the assessment tool, but for the initial recertification, no faculty member can be expected to show outcome
assessment, that’s five years hence” explained Jeff. So the committee has developed 5 criteria that will be used this year, and then the
initial 5 criteria will be used five years hence. The revised criterion for this year is as follows:
C1’. The course content provides significant
opportunity for students
to gain a greater understanding of the cultural or ethnic diversity of the
people of the
C2’. The course content provides significant
opportunity for students
to gain a greater understanding of the world religions and cultures.
C3’. The course content provides significant
opportunity for students
to gain a greater understanding of the behavior of individuals from other
cultures and ethnic backgrounds.
C4’. The course content provides significant
opportunity for students
to deepen their understanding of their own ethnic and cultural
background, beliefs, and values.
C5’. The course content provides significant
opportunity for students
to use their understanding of ethnic, cultural, gender-related or religious
differences to inform their own behavior and decisions to a significantly
greater degree.
Jeff informed
the Senate that the deadline for submitting courses is
out in their units by passing along the following url for the form: http://www.udel.edu/registrar/mcrev.html
Jeff then answered questions and concerns. Dr. Fox asked about a standard outcome assessment tool. Jeff referred this question to
John Courtright, Undergraduate Studies. John stated that there will be an assessment guru that will be available through CTE to help
with this process of assessments. Eric Benson asked about staggering the recertification so that all 217 courses wouldn’t be up for
recertification at the same time. Jeff explained that the committee decided not to stagger the courses, but recertify them every five
years. Avron Abraham asked if courses came in after the recertification period, when would they be up again. Jeff explained that they
would be up at the very next recertification period. So, if they came two years after the recertification period they would be up for
recertification in three years. Sheldon Pollack asked if 215 courses were three times more than needed. Jeff explained that he didn’t
really know, but as a committee they would be looking for possible “fat that needs to be shed”. Lawrence Duggan asked for answers
to questions that had been submitted by the college of Arts and Sciences. Jeff answered that his committee was looking into those
questions and they would be addressing them in the future. It was also suggested that outcomes assessment was the rage of community
colleges, but not this university. John Courtright informs the Senate that Middle States accreditation will be based on outcomes
assessment and that this is practice in universities other than community colleges. Linda Gottfredson asked about numbers 4 and 5
“their own behavior” Linda said that we should be careful not to demand that students disclose their own personal beliefs when we go
to assess them. Jeff thinks it’s a good point, but that this is not the intent of the committee. Jay Hildebrandt asked a house keeping
question concerning the time frame for 2005- 2006 . Jeff said that they have until April before courses have to be ready for the
catalog, and that they plan to have them completed by then. Provost Rich told the Senate that they can check the website for Middle
States Commission on Higher Education for further clarification on outcome assessments - what it does and does not mean. He told
the Senate to keep in mind that this has become important to accreditation agencies under the challenge of having federal legislators
replace the pier based accreditation with a government review systems. Eric Rise asked if the Dec. 20th deadline is for existing courses
or new courses also. Jeff said that is for both, but this is only the Undergraduate Studies Committee’s deadline. Larry Peterson asked
if they anticipate this type of assessments being applied to course proposals other than the two that are mentioned today - E110 and
multicultural requirement courses? Provost Rich answered the question by saying that the expectation will be applied to the institution
as a whole, but maybe not in the exact same way. The requirement is not course specific. Jay Custer stated that “when you change the
criteria for the new courses it’s significant that you put in significant opportunity in all cases; and then when you move to the evaluation
on the outcomes and drop opportunity and then say have acquired in many of them that they are really two different things and that
accreditation shouldn’t drive this process, but rather thinking about it more clearly should.” He thinks that the committee has set up
two very different kinds of criteria - “
opportunity of the class and maybe decide on their personal outcome, if you will, to be to disregard them. To me you are kind of
saying that that’s a negative outcome. It doesn’t seem possible to rate classes or accredit them, or assess their outcomes on the basis
to which they get people perhaps to change their minds about beliefs or things like that”. Dr. Custer said that “in all cases all we can
ever hope to do is to provide them with the opportunity and the information so they can do that.” He said he hopes that between now
and five years the committee would do some more thinking about those assessments and push them towards opportunity and not
change peoples minds.
IV. Announcements: Senate President Charles Boncelet informed the Senate that an electronic form is still in the works. November 20th is the new target date for getting the new form up and ready. When the new electronic form is ready this word document form will be taken away.
A forum for electronic privacy policy will be held this spring. It will be co sponsored by the Faculty Senate and the Provost Office. Prof Jeffery Rosen of George Washington law school will speak on April 5th.
Grade Inflation – an ad hoc committee will be approved again this year. The committee will be larger and the Executive Committee will write its charge.
V. Consent Agenda:
a. Announcements for Challenge: None
b. Resolutions: None
VI. Regular Agenda:
a. Old Business: None
b. New Business: None
VII. Introduction of New Business: None
VIII.
Adjournment: The
meeting adjourned at
Respectfully Submitted,
Karren Helsel-Spry