Thursday, December 21, 2006

The National Survey on Student Engagement (NSSE)

Quick check of hands, how many of you have heard of the above NSSE? If not, it is time to get acquainted with it. We have previously talked about rankings in this blog and I promised we would return to the subject. The NSSE is not so much a ranking system as it is a measure of how colleges and universities are engaging their students along five different dimensions:

1) Level of academic challenge
2) Active and collaborative learning
3) Student-faculty interaction
4) Enriching educational experiences
5) Supportive campus environment

Students are surveyed (PDF document) about their experience along these different dimensions. From reading the survey, it is obvious that NSSE takes a thorough look at student engagement. Unlike other surveys, NSSE does not give numerical ranks to each of the colleges that participate. Instead, what you will find in their report is how institutions are doing on average based on their Carnegie category (Doctoral, Master's, and Baccalaureate). If you are considering attending an institution like the University of California, then you would be interested in NSSE data on Doctoral (Very High research activity) whereas if you were looking at a California State University, you would want to look at Master's data for the size of the University (Large, Medium, or Small). You can download the 2006 report here.

This data, like the Princeton Review's system we examined earlier, is qualitative in nature. However NSSE data is collected and analyzed through statistical research and interpretation methods. NSSE does not compile silly lists, as does Princeton Review. It is a
serious attempt to understand the quality of education that the nation's colleges and universities are providing. Colleges who participate in NSSE do so for a variety of reasons. They may be looking for ways to improve their education, understand their student's perception of their education, or they believe in the goals of the NSSE.

As a student or parent, I suggest you look at the variety of questions asked in the student survey, determine which of those measures are most important to you, and then look at the results to see how institutions of the general type you are interested in are doing according to their students.

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