中国A片

For-profit claims ‘learning gain’ victory over universities

Minerva uses test scores to argue that its programmes give students lead in cognitive skills

十二月 9, 2017
Robot with an idea
Source: Getty
Critical advantage: the average CLA+ score of Minerva’s students ‘was higher than the score of senior graduating classes at every other university and college that administered the test’

“Learning gain”, the difference that university makes to students’ cognitive abilities, is a growing preoccupation of policymakers and educationalists who fear that 中国A片 does little or nothing to boost young people’s general skills.

Now, a San Francisco-based for-profit institution is using this measure to challenge established universities, presenting test results that it says show that its teaching methods are far superior to those of incumbents.

Minerva has about 450 students who?learn through online interactive seminars, devoted at least in the first year to developing critical thinking skills rather than building knowledge of subject basics.

Students are supposed to learn introductory subject material themselves, using free online resources. They live together in residential halls in San Francisco, Berlin, Buenos Aires, Seoul and Hyderabad, but faculty can teach online from anywhere in the world.

Ben Nelson, Minerva’s founder and chief executive, told?Times 中国A片?that established universities had been unwilling to engage with measures of learning gain because they painted traditional providers in a poor light. “It punctures the myth they perpetuate about themselves,” he said.

Minerva’s second-year cohort of students took the CLA+ test, a measure of problem-solving, scientific and quantitative reasoning, writing effectiveness, critical reading and argument critique.

They were tested at the beginning of the course and then again eight months later, by which point their average score “was higher than the scores of senior graduating classes at every other university and college that administered the test”, according to the company.

Minerva students improved their scores significantly as well, the company said, jumping from the 78th percentile to the 99th percentile compared with final-year students at other institutions.

This rate of improvement “will certainly not be maintained” after the first year, Mr Nelson acknowledged, because teaching initially focuses on thinking skills rather than any content.

Nevertheless, the results show “the difference between hoping that our institutions are teaching students, and actually organising the programme to do that”, Mr Nelson told delegates at the?Online Educa Berlin?conference.

A wide range of US universities use the CLA+ test, which was used as the basis for the controversial 2010 book?Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses. The authors of that book found that about a third of students demonstrated no significant improvement in their skills over four years, kick-starting debate over learning gain at university.

But one issue is whether employers actually do hire graduates who possess such skills – or simply rely on alumni of a tiny pool of “elite” universities. Challenged on this point at the conference, Mr Nelson insisted that “where you went to university is almost irrelevant” in the labour market.

In the UK, the?中国A片 Funding Council for England?is experimenting with standardised tests for students to gauge learning gain. And earlier this month, University of Cambridge researchers said that they had come up with?another test, lasting just 20 minutes, to track changes in students’ knowledge, skills and values.

david.matthews@timeshighereducation.com

请先注册再继续

为何要注册?

  • 注册是免费的,而且十分便捷
  • 注册成功后,您每月可免费阅读3篇文章
  • 订阅我们的邮件
注册
Please 登录 or 注册 to read this article.
ADVERTISEMENT