Title: Assessing Student Performance and Attitudes Based on Common Learning Goals and Alternative Pedagogies: The Case of Principles of Financial Accounting
Abstract: INTRODUCTION In the mid-1990s, the accounting department at a comprehensive, public university on the West Coast completely reengineered its two introductory undergraduate accounting courses. The model for these courses was disseminated six other colleges and universities across the U.S. as a result of two grants from U.S. Department of Education Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education (FIPSE). The goals of the revised Introduction Accounting I and Accounting II courses were to (1) introduce students decision making processes involving financial data, (2) bring about accounting literacy, and (3) develop students' problem-solving skills. The strategy moved away from the traditional rule based, procedure oriented a more dynamic, interactive learning mode (DeBerg, Adams & Lea, 1998). Almost all of the instructors teaching the courses during the five-year grant period were tenured or tenure-track faculty. The re-designed courses had drastically altered the role of the instructor both in and outside the classroom. For example, within the classroom, the instructor was expected call on students frequently during interactive, full-group discussions which required skills in use of the Socratic teaching method. The instructor also had assist student teams as they worked on their in-class group assignments, which required coaching/facilitator skills. Instructors were also expected take a more active role in providing useful feedback students regarding their writing and oral communication skills, which also required additional coaching/facilitator skills. In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the accounting department drifted back a more traditional approach. This occurred for several reasons, but the main reason was the replacement of retiring faculty with temporary or inexperienced faculty teach the introductory courses. Except for one professor remaining from the FIPSE project, the replacement instructors were not trained teach the re-designed courses. Between 2001 and 2004, the accounting department had little choice but revert a traditional model. The traditional model did not rely on a course coordinator for both courses; instead, instructors were allowed choose their own learning goals and objectives, they had the freedom choose their preferred textbook, and they authored their own final exams. Collaboration among faculty was minimal. Gone were the FIPSE days of weekly faculty meetings have conversations about course content, teaching styles and approaches that worked. However, the environment changed in late 2004 when the College of Business adopted 10 learning goals and related student learning outcomes as part of its assurance of learning efforts inform and influence continuous improvement efforts. These goals and outcomes were identified after the issuance of new standards by the Association for the Advancement Collegiate Schools of Business (AACSB, 2003), which emphasized outcomes assessment and accountability. Moreover, in 2005, the College of Business created a set of formal course coordinator guidelines for courses with multiple instructors. The development of consistent learning outcomes, the appointment of a course coordinator, and a renewed emphasis on assessment spurred the accounting faculty be more systematic and rigorous in evaluating pedagogical outcomes. This study focuses on one semester (fall, 2007) when all five instructors teaching the course: (a) agreed focus on 17 common student learning outcomes, (b) designed a common final exam test whether these outcomes had been achieved, and (c) encouraged one instructor (who was also the course coordinator) teach in a nontraditional format. The nontraditional format included heavy reliance on technology (e.g., the instructor chose not use a textbook; instead, he relied on free Internet content and Excel spreadsheets as the primary learning materials) and small group collaboration. …
Publication Year: 2012
Publication Date: 2012-11-01
Language: en
Type: article
Access and Citation
Cited By Count: 7
AI Researcher Chatbot
Get quick answers to your questions about the article from our AI researcher chatbot