Critical Resources Database
Choose one of the critical resource collections:
Working Group 3: Change LeadersWorking Groups 2 & 4: Costs, Benefits, and Demonstrating ImpactWorking Group 6: Aligning Faculty WorkBecome an ASCN Speaker » Submit a Resource »
Use the search or choose from a selection of topics below:
Change Topics (Working Groups)
Resource Type
- Blog Post 59 matches
- Book 13 matches
- Booklet 5 matches
- Book Section 2 matches
- Conference Paper 3 matches
- Journal Article 55 matches
- Opinion Piece 2 matches
- Poster 6 matches
- Presentation 2 matches
- Report 51 matches
- Thesis 1 match
- Toolkit 5 matches
- Website 74 matches
- White Paper 7 matches
- Working Paper 2 matches
Results 91 - 100 of 280 matches
The Future of Undergraduate Education: The Future of America
The Future of Undergraduate Education: The Future of America This report provides a comprehensive national strategy, based on three practical and actionable recommendations, for supporting student success in the ...
Resource Type: Report
Whether and How Money Matters in K-12 Education
Margaret L. Plecki; Tino A. Castańeda
The authors review the research on the allocation of resources to support improvement of student learning in public K-12 education, including policies, methodological issues, and availability of data.
Resource Type: Journal Article
Program Components: Outreach:Outreach to K12 Teachers and Students, Institutional Systems:Strategic Planning
Accelerating Systemic Change Network: A Resource for Change Agents
Accelerating Systemic Change Network: A Resource for Change Agents The Accelerating Systemic Change Network (ASCN) is a network of individuals and institutions, formed with the goal of more quickly advancing STEM ...
Resource Type: Poster
Program Components: Outreach:Policy Change, Inter-Institutional Collaboration
How can we help change leaders understand how measurement and data can be used?
David Bressoud, Macalester College
ASCN Working Group 4: Demonstrating Impact is trying something new. This group's mission is to identify, explain, and disseminate information on metrics that hold the potential to document, foster, accelerate, and communicate systemic change. Good questions are a great way to share and expand knowledge. Each month a question of interest and value to the higher education community will be sent to the working group members. Responses will be collated and posted on the ASCN blog. We hope that this will lead to beneficial collaborations not just among the members of the working group, but also across the network, and will reach the larger higher education community interested in systemic change. The assumption behind this group is that measurement and data are effective mechanisms for facilitating change. The question for this month has two parts. How can we help change leaders understand how measurement and data can be used? Can you give an example from your own experience where this has happened? Below are the first three responses received. Please use comment section to respond to the question and to engage in a discussion about the current responses. If there is a link or citation that you think would be of value to other readers, please include this as well. In addition, if there are any questions you would like Demonstrating Impact Working Group to address, please email those to Inese, the ASCN Project Manager.
Resource Type: Blog Post
Program Components: Professional Development:Course Evaluation, Student Assessment, Curriculum Development
Do I want to be recognized? Reflections on my experience with (Dis)Ability and working in Higher Education
Paul Artale, Henry Ford Community College
My name is Paul. I was born missing fingers and have funny arms. I am ok with it. There really isn't much that I can't do and I have learned to adapt. People who looked at me probably thought I could never play college football but yeah...I did that. I even coached it for a while. I loved my time working in athletics and although I looked different, I never felt out of place or discriminated against. I was just Paul Artale, football guy, and keeping teams from scoring on us was the most important thing in the world. I bring up football because being an athlete (and the lessons learned from it) are still very prominent pieces of my identity. Disability is a complex and nuanced identity. Disability is not a primary, or even secondary identity for many people with a disability. My athletic identity, ethnicity, and nationality (Canadian) are far more prevalent in my life. On a good day, it is something I don't think about much about. On a rare bad day it is something that I repress. Disability is often left out of discussions about diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) because individuals with disabilities frequently do not prioritize their disability identity, or leave it completely out of conversations because it is a secondary or tertiary identity. Another reason is that disability is often perceived as a medical condition; a person has a condition, they adapt, they persist, and they almost forget they had a disability in the first place.
Resource Type: Blog Post
Program Components: Institutional Systems:Personnel/Hiring, Professional Development:Diversity/Inclusion
Engaging the "race question": Accountability and equity in higher education
Engaging the "race question": Accountability and equity in higher education Drawing on CUE's Equity Scorecard, demonstrate what educators need to know and do to take an active role in racial equity ...
Resource Type: Book
Program Components: Professional Development, Institutional Systems
Ethnology and Evaluation Research at CU Boulder
Ethnology and Evaluation Research at CU Boulder E&ER conducts research and evaluation on a variety of issues in STEM education, including student and faculty outcomes, women in science, under-represented ...
Resource Type: Website
Program Components: Professional Development
Work organization and ergonomics
Work organization and ergonomics Carayon & Smith. Paper from field of systems engineering and ergonomics that describes theory of Work Systems and applied methods for understanding socio-technical aspects of ...
Resource Type: Journal Article
Program Components: Professional Development
Starting Point: Teaching and Learning Economics
Starting Point: Teaching and Learning Economics Web portal for economists that provides access to a variety of evidence-based teaching practices. Suggested Citation Science Education Resource Center. (2016, ...
Resource Type: Website
Program Components: Supporting Students:Academic Support, Outreach:Informal Education
SEI Course Transformation guidance
SEI Course Transformation guidance Short two-pagers and videos, including a downloadable Course Transformation Guide, summarizing educational research and practice for instructors. From Science Education ...
Resource Type: Website
Program Components: Professional Development:Curriculum Development, Pedagogical Training