BENCHMARKING BEST PRACTICES IN THE LEARNING COLLEGE

Kay M. McClenney

Across North America, increasing numbers of community and technical

colleges are committing themselves to an important and timely challenge:

the transformation of good or even excellent institutions into colleges

that are powerfully and effectively focused on student learning. An example

of this commitment is found in the work of 12 Vanguard Learning Colleges*

that have been part of the Learning College Project at the League for

Innovation.

Reflecting on their progress in becoming more learning-centered

institutions, the faculty, staff, and administrators of these colleges

strongly affirm the importance of benchmarking as a tool for

transformation. Widely used in the private sector, benchmarking is

generally defined as a process for identifying, understanding, and adapting

outstanding practices from other organizations in order to help one's own

organization improve its performance. In the case of the learning college,

of course, the central focus is on improvement of student learning and

persistence.

According to the American Productivity and Quality Center (APQC), some key

themes characterize successful benchmarking and best-practice adoption

efforts. Among them are these two:

1. Transfer is a people-to-people process; meaningful relationships precede

sharing and transfer.

2. Benchmarking stems from a personal and organizational willingness to

learn. A vibrant sense of curiosity and a deep respect and desire for

learning may be the real keys. [See <

The founder of APQC, Jack Grayson, says that benchmarking requires "being

humble enough to admit that another [organization] is better at something

and being wise enough to learn how to match or surpass it." The Vanguard

Learning Colleges seized the opportunity to identify among their fellow

institutions the exemplary programs and practices that seemed worthy of

examination, adaptation, and then, perhaps, adoption on their own campuses.

Unquestionably, there are other community colleges whose work deserves

similar mention and similar attention in benchmarking work. The community

college field needs to hear also about their practices-and the evidence of

their effectiveness.

PROMISING PRACTICES

Given the number of intriguing initiatives underway at the 12 Vanguard

Learning Colleges, it is challenging to name a few that particularly stand

out. However, a sampling of programs and practices that deserve serious

attention would surely include the following:

Organizational Structure to Support Learning. Cascadia Community College

(WA), organized around four major learning outcomes, and Community College

of Denver, organized into "centers" that cut across traditional boundaries.

Strategic Plan Integration and Follow-Through. Moraine Valley Community

College, Valencia Community College, Community College of Baltimore County

(CCBC).

Cross-Functional Teams and Other Inclusive Approaches to Institutional

Transformation. "Learning Dialogs" at Sinclair Community College and

Moraine Valley Community College; the Council for Innovation and Student

Learning (CISL) at Community College of Baltimore County; Valencia

Community College's "Goal Teams," formed to monitor and report progress

toward achievement of goals set forth in the college's strategic plan,

titled "Learning First;" Kirkwood Community College's Student Success

Council, which has been a significant force in establishing direction and

follow-through for a variety of initiatives, including those focused on

student orientation and advising.

Learning Strategies. Learning communities at Community College of Denver,

Lane Community College, and elsewhere (e.g., the average retention rate for

students in learning communities at CCD for spring/fall and fall/spring was

71 percent, compared with the college average of 55 percent); linkages

between credit and noncredit programs and staffing pioneered at Moraine

Valley; Process Learning at Kirkwood Community College, Madison Area

Technical College, and Sinclair Community College; the College 101 (student

orientation) course at Moraine Valley; and LifeMap, the outstanding

academic advising model at Valencia.

Learning Outcomes and Assessment. Community College of Baltimore County

(GREAT Project - GeneRal Education Assessment Teams); Cascadia Community

College (building learning outcomes into the fabric of the institution;

work on cross-cutting core "literacies"); the Community College of Denver's

Computerized Study Skills Assessment Test (CCSAT), now being pilot tested

at two other colleges; Kirkwood's Essential Skills Institute, a faculty-led

institute that is exploring the option of offering vocational students a

certificate in Essential Skills when they show competence in communication,

teamwork, and computation skills; CCD's cross-functional curriculum

development work, which addresses curriculum duplication among Information

Technology, Graphic Design, Multimedia, Communication (radio/film/video)

and Graphic Technology programs and which started with the question, "What

competencies do students need?"; Humber College's Generic Skills Resource

Manuals, developed for Communications, Writing Across the Curriculum,

Personal Skills, Interpersonal Skills, Thinking Skills, Mathematics, and

Computer Skills; CCBC's and Kirkwood's learning outcomes assessment

projects, engaging faculty in design and implementation of assessments; and

the developing culture of evidence at Richland College, where there is a

serious commitment to processes for quality improvement.

Programs and Services for Underprepared Students. Valencia's focus on

student experience at "the front door" of the college; comprehensive

academic and support programs for first generation students at CCD; the

Kirkwood Community College Learning Services department, nominated as one

of the best programs in the country; and an intensive focus on improvement

of programs and services for underprepared students at Madison Area

Technical College.

Tracking Student Progress. Student tracking systems at CCBC and at Humber

College; Community College of Denver's (CCD) student tracking database (a

work still in progress); information provided to faculty about students in

their classrooms at Richland College.

Technology to Support and Enhance Learning. The Center for Interactive

Learning at Sinclair; Cascadia Community College's Student ePortfolio and

Employee ePortfolio (note that Palomar College has also done some work in

this area); CCBC's Virtual Academy (for faculty who wish to teach distance

learning courses); Kirkwood's use of learning technology to improve

Surgical Technology student and program performance (all exams for the

three-semester Surgical Technology program will be imported into the

Perception online test-authoring system, and then test data on acquisition

of program competencies will be analyzed and online tutorials created to

address areas of weak learning); the new AtLas portal at Valencia, an

online portal that connects students to tools needed to succeed at

Valencia, enabling them to register and pay for classes, check their

grades, email professors and classmates, see campus announcements, and

search job sites. AtLas also connects students to the resources of LifeMap,

Valencia's comprehensive system of student services and academic planning.

Faculty and Staff Recruitment and Development. A splendid new faculty

orientation program at Moraine Valley; innovations in role definitions and

staffing patterns at Richland College; Humber's impressive staff

development program; MATC's revision of recruitment and selection processes

to reflect learning-centered principles; CCBC's Virtual Academy, for

faculty who wish to teach distance learning courses; the "teacher

formation" program at Richland, based on Parker Palmer's Courage to Teach;

CCD's faculty performance appraisal and pay-for-performance system.

RAISING THE BAR

Benchmarking is a strategy particularly beneficial in colleges where people

are willing to focus their efforts on selected aspects of institutional

practice, with an eye toward improvement; where value is placed on evidence

of effectiveness; and where such evidence is an important factor in

decisions about institutional policy, programs, and practices.

If benchmarking is to play its part in quality improvement, the community

college field must increasingly insist on a meaningful benchmarking

process, which particularly includes a rigorous definition of the term best

practice. Reference to best practices in education quite clearly should be

based on evidence that the practices produce improved results.

Unfortunately for those who seek it, the evidence we need does not always

exist or may not endure rigorous scrutiny. In those cases, of course,

community college people press ahead, relying still on critical judgment,

the wisdom of experience, and a willingness to innovate. But the serious

pursuit of quality in undergraduate education highlights the acute need for

rigorous evaluation of educational practices, yielding models and

strategies that are proven effective. The hallmark questions for the

learning college are the two posed by Terry O'Banion: "How does this

action promote and expand student learning?" and the tough one, "How do we

know?"

Kay McClenney (<mailto:>) is Director of the Community

College Survey of Student Engagement and Adjunct Professor in the Community

College Leadership Program at The University of Texas. She was the

external evaluator for the League's Learning College Project.

* The colleges that have participated in the Learning College Project are

Cascadia Community College; Community College of Baltimore County (CCBC);

Community College of Denver (CCD); Humber College; Kirkwood Community

College; Lane Community College; Madison Area Technical College (MATC);

Moraine Valley Community College; Palomar College; Richland Community

College (TX); Sinclair Community College; and Valencia Community College.