Citation
MacDonald, S. K., Williams, L. M., Lazowski, R. A., Horst, S. J., & Barron, K. E. (2014). Faculty Attitudes toward General Education Assessment: A Qualitative Study about Their Motivation. Research & Practice in Assessment, 9.
Abstract
As assessment becomes an ever more critical facet of higher education, it
is apparent that some faculty do not always value assessment (Crossley &
Wang, 2010; Ebersole, 2009). Further, faculty may react with resistance,
particularly when they perceive that assessment is being imposed upon
them from external sources (Crossley & Wang, 2010; Marrs, 2009; Welsh
& Metcalf, 2003). Motivation for faculty to participate in assessment is
therefore a critical question. We conducted a qualitative study to explore
faculty attitudes towards general education assessment, focusing particularly
on faculty motivation for engaging in assessment. General education
coordinators were interviewed about their perceptions of student learning
outcomes assessment, using a semi-structured interview approach, and
then coded by consensus according to Expectancy-Value Theory of motivation
(Eccles et al., 1983; Wigfield & Eccles, 2000; Wentzel & Brophy,
2014). Implications for future assessment practice are also shared.