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COM-FSM > Assessment Coordinator and Assistant-ALO > General Education
General EducationTable of contentsNo headersI would like to have a discussion about modifying the current GE PSLOs to the current ISLOs. Please post your comments in the comment box at the bottom of the page.
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Although not strictly "on topic," I want to expand on the concept of having more than one workshop. With multiple workshops, we could deal with more tasks.
For example, another worthwhile workshop would be to have someone in each division learn how to post information to the college calendar, listing time, place, and agenda or providing links to these. At present, only a couple of people seem to know how to do this. This workshop might be held in the Lang/Lit computer lab. The 20 or so participants could then teach what they learn in their divisions.
Another workshop should be on the new handbook. One member of each division could examine one section and report to the workshop any problems or suggestions. The workshop leader could assemble those and pass them on, and workshop members could inform their respective divisions, as I indicate below.
Before a final closing comment in the practice gym (for instance), workshop participants could reassemble in their divisions and share what they learned. Divisions would have people in each workshop, creating an "information gap" that we would fill or bridge by briefly going over what each workshop covered. Supervisors could then collect and summarize the discussion and pass it up the chain of command. Coupled with reports from workshop leaders, we would have a more complete picture of what was accomplished and perhaps an indication of what needs to be done at a future workshop.
Finally, Alton's point about external input is apt. One thing that seems to be missing from our design of outcomes is reference to what other schools are doing. We need evidence that the orgy of outcomes in which we appear to be indulging in has any other effect than making us feel good about ourselves. In short, we need evidence, for instance, that the huge list of outcomes shown on some Hawaii community college websites produces transfer, degree, or certificate students who can actually do what the proponents of outcomes promise: not that students "should" be able to do A-Z but that they "will" do it. edited 11:58, 19 Jan 2014