CAE - Fifty Years Strong


Commission for Assessment and Evaluation

50 Years Strong

At the annual ACPA Convention in Baltimore in just a few weeks, the Commission for Assessment and Evaluation will celebrate its golden anniversary. Originally titled “Commission IX”, it was among the first eleven functional areas recognized by the association in 1961. Over the course of these past fifty years, the Commission has continued to grow, benefitting from forward-thinking leadership and an involved membership.

 

In 1986, Marcia Baxter Magolda chronicled the Commission’s 25-year history and, in conclusion, noted:

 

…while activities have changed over the history of the Commission, the major focus during each period accurately reflected the needs of the profession at the time.

 

Indeed, this effort to meet the needs of the profession remains a mainstay of the Commission these additional 25 years later.

 

Since Baxter Magolda’s reflective piece, the landscape of assessment in higher education, in general, and student affairs, in particular, has changed dramatically. Calls for higher education reform (cite sources) took hold late in the decade of the ‘80s and grew powerfully through the 1990s. Increasing demands – by the government, employers, and parent – for institutional accountability for learning left colleges and universities, as well as accrediting agencies, scrambling for means to demonstrate what students were learning and how. Grades, exam scores, and graduation rates – albeit important – no longer sufficed as indicators of learning. Student affairs professionals needed to be able to demonstrate co-curricular student learning and development as well as efforts to improve practice based on evidence.

 

The Commission’s focus shifted slightly, then, as the territory of assessment moved away from testing and towards student learning and institutional improvement. Efforts to enhance assessment skill capacity for student affairs professionals continued to grow as primary focal point for the Commission. Building on our history and strong foundation, today, the Commission’s mission is to “promote assessment skills and knowledge to facilitate and support student learning, development, and effective student affairs practice.” Among many others, some of the steps taken to help us achieve that mission have included:

 

 

As we look to the next 50 years, we have a tremendously solid foundation on which to build. The future of student affairs assessment and evaluation as well as student learning and development will continue to change. As it does so, Commission IX will be there to meet the ever-changing needs of our profession.