In this Book

  • Reclaiming Accountability: Improving Writing Programs through Accreditation and Large-Scale Assessments
  • Book
  • Edited by Wendy Sharer, Tracy Ann Morse, Michelle F. Eble, and William P. Banks
  • 2016
  • Published by: Utah State University Press
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summary

Reclaiming Accountability brings together a series of critical case studies of writing programs that have planned, implemented, and/or assessed the impact of large-scale accreditation-supported initiatives. The book reimagines accreditation as a way to leverage institutional or programmatic change.

Contributions to the volume are divided into three parts. Part 1 considers how specialists in composition and rhetoric can work most productively with accrediting bodies to design assessments and initiatives that meet requirements while also helping those agencies to better understand how writing develops and how it can most effectively be assessed. Parts 2 and 3 present case studies of how institutions have used ongoing accreditation and assessment imperatives to meet student learning needs through programmatic changes and faculty development. They provide concrete examples of productive curricular (part 2) and instructional (part 3) changes that can follow from accreditation mandates while providing guidance for navigating challenges and pitfalls that WPAs may encounter within shifting and often volatile local, regional, and national contexts.

In addition to providing examples of how others in the profession might approach such work, Reclaiming Accountability addresses assessment requirements beyond those in the writing program itself. It will be of interest to department heads, administrators, writing program directors, and those involved with writing teacher education, among others.

Contributors: Linda Adler-Kassner, William P. Banks, Remica Bingham-Risher, Melanie Burdick, Polina Chemishanova, Malkiel Choseed, Kyle Christiansen, Angela Crow, Maggie Debelius, Michelle F. Eble, Jonathan Elmore, Lorna Gonzalez, Angela Green, Jim Henry, Ryan Hoover, Rebecca Ingalls, Cynthia Miecznikowski, Susan Miller-Cochran, Cindy Moore, Tracy Ann Morse, Joyce Magnotto Neff, Karen Nulton, Peggy O’Neill, Jessica Parker, Mary Rist, Rochelle Rodrigo, Tulora Roeckers, Shirley K. Rose, Iris M. Saltiel, Wendy Sharer, Terri Van Sickle, Jane Chapman Vigil, David M. Weed

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Title Page, Copyright Page
  2. pp. i-iv
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  1. Contents
  2. pp. v-2
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  1. Introduction: Accreditation and Assessment as Opportunity
  2. Wendy Sharer, Tracy Ann Morse, Michelle F. Eble, and William P. Banks
  3. pp. 3-14
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  1. Part One: Laying the Foundations—Educating and Learning from Accrediting Bodies
  2. pp. 15-16
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  1. 1. Assessing for Learning in an Age of Comparability: Remembering the Importance of Context
  2. Cindy Moore, Peggy O’Neill, and Angela Crow
  3. pp. 17-35
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  1. 2. QEP Evaluation as Opportunity: Teaching and Learning through the Accreditation Process
  2. Susan Miller-Cochran and Rochelle Rodrigo
  3. pp. 36-51
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  1. 3. Understanding Accreditation’s History and Role in Higher Education: How It Matters to College Writing Programs
  2. Shirley K. Rose
  3. pp. 52-64
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  1. Part Two: Curriculum and Program Development through Assessment and Accreditation
  2. pp. 65-66
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  1. 4. Going All In: Creating a Community College Writing Program through the QEP and Reaccreditation Process
  2. Jonathan Elmore and Teressa Van Sickle
  3. pp. 67-86
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  1. 5. Moving Forward: What General Studies Assessment Taught Us about Writing, Instruction, and Student Learning
  2. Jessica Parker and Jane Chapman Vigil
  3. pp. 87-107
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  1. 6. Making Peace with a “Regrettable Necessity”: Composition Instructors Negotiate Curricular Standardization
  2. David Weed, Tulora Roeckers, and Melanie Burdick
  3. pp. 108-128
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  1. 7. A Tool for Program Building: Programmatic Assessment and the English Department at Onondaga Community College
  2. Malkiel Choseed
  3. pp. 129-144
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  1. 8. Centering and De-Centering Assessment: Accountability, Accreditation, and Expertise
  2. Karen Nulton and Rebecca Ingalls
  3. pp. 145-162
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  1. 10. SEUFolios: A Tool for Using ePortfolios as Both Departmental Assessment and Multimodal Pedagogy
  2. Ryan S. Hoover and Mary Rist
  3. pp. 187-210
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  1. Part Three: Faculty Development through Assessment and Accreditation
  2. pp. 211-212
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  1. 11. Write to the Top: How One Regional University Made Writing Everybody’s Business
  2. Polina Chemishanova and Cynthia Miecznikowski
  3. pp. 213-241
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  1. 12. “Everybody Writes”: Accreditation-Based Assessment as Professional Development at a Research Intensive University
  2. Linda Adler-Kassner and Lorna Gonzalez
  3. pp. 242-262
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  1. 13. A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Assessment: Lessons from a Thresholds-Based Approach
  2. Maggie Debelius
  3. pp. 263-278
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  1. 14. Faculty Learning Outcomes: The Impact of QEP Workshops on Faculty Beliefs and Practices
  2. Joyce Neff and Remica Bingham-Risher
  3. pp. 279-303
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  1. 15. From the Outside In: Creating a Culture of Writing through a QEP
  2. Angela Green, Iris Saltiel, and Kyle Christiansen
  3. pp. 304-327
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  1. About the Authors
  2. pp. 328-332
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 333-335
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