UNC Asheville Students Engaged in the Right Stuff;
National Survey Affirms UNC Asheville's Approach to Teaching and Learning
UNC Asheville has
earned high marks in the National Survey of Student Engagement, released
November 15, 2004. The survey gives participating schools an idea of how
well students are learning and what students put into and get out of their
college experience. Some 163,000 first-year and senior students at 472
U.S. colleges and universities participated in the survey, conducted this
past spring.
The results for
UNC Asheville show that the university is clearly meeting its mission as
an institution focused on teaching and learning, close student-faculty
interaction, and community service, said Mark Padilla, UNC Asheville
Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic and Student Affairs.
The survey results
are reported for five key areas, all of which measure the time and energy
that students put into activities that lead to better learning, critical
thinking, civic involvement, and other benefits. Among the first-year
students surveyed, UNC Asheville was in the top 20 percent nationally for
level of academic challenge, and in the top 30 percent nationally for
student-faculty interaction, enriching educational experience, supportive
campus environment, and active and collaborative learning. Among the
seniors surveyed, UNC Asheville was in the top 30 percent nationally for
level of academic challenge, student-faculty interaction, enriching
educational experience, and supportive campus environment, and in the top
40 percent for active and collaborative learning.
“UNC Asheville
is delighted to learn that this objective measure of our progress in
creating a nurturing and academically challenging environment confirms
that our students are, in fact, developing intellectual and moral
awareness, educational skill sets, and community-building values.
The National Survey of Student Engagement is a clear affirmation of
our collective dedication to become a premier liberal arts college, one
that performs impressively on the national stage,” said Padilla.
Many specific items on the survey point to
UNC Asheville’s focus on teaching and learning. For example, 51 percent
of first-year students and 76 percent of seniors often put together ideas
or concepts from different courses when completing assignments or during
class discussions. Similarly, 79 percent of first-year students and 86
percent of seniors report that their coursework emphasizes synthesizing
and organizing ideas, information, or experiences “quite a bit” or
“very much.”
Other survey results demonstrate UNC
Asheville’s emphasis on close student-faculty interaction. For example,
69 percent of first-year students and 84 percent of seniors at UNC
Asheville reported discussing ideas from classes with faculty members
outside of class; 51 percent of first-year students and 68 percent of
seniors reported working with faculty members on activities other than
coursework; and on a scale of 1 to 7 that rates the quality of
relationships with faculty members, with 7 being the best, the
average rating given by first-year students was 6.04 and by seniors was
6.03.
Additional survey items point to success in
civic engagement and community service.
Seventy-eight percent of first-year students and 66 percent of
seniors participated in a community-based project as part of a regular
course; 57 percent of first-year students and 70 percent of seniors
participated in community service or volunteer work with additional
students planning to do so before graduating; and 39 percent of first-year
students and 37 of percent seniors report that UNC Asheville contributed
“very much” or “quite a bit” to their voting in local, state and
national elections.
The
National Survey of Student Engagement, an initiative of The Pew Charitable
Trusts, is designed to survey undergraduates directly about their
educational experiences. Colleges and universities have been participating
in growing numbers since its inception in 2000. Survey items represent
“good practices” in undergraduate education and reflect behaviors by
students and institutions that are associated with desired outcomes of
college.
“Engagement is a critical factor in the
educational process because the more time and energy students devote to
desired activities, the more likely they are to develop habits of the mind
that are key to success after college, including participating in civic
affairs,” said George Kuh, the National Survey of Student Engagement
director and Indiana University-Bloomington professor of higher education.
“In addition, engagement is linked to grades and graduation, outcomes
that everyone agrees are important.”
Media Contact:
- Merianne Epstein, UNC Asheville Public Information director,
828/251-6676
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