ASSESSMENT AT FUA

The assessment process at FUA is not regarded as evaluations of single areas or operations, but as a systemic approach to improving such areas and the institution’s mission fulfillment in a simultaneous and interconnected manner.

The assessment process of the FUA system is structured through periodic activities with the goal of elaborating, developing, and verifying educational goals and improving institutional performance through its fulfillment of the mission. A hybrid data collection method employs the analysis of quantitative and qualitative data points across the system.

Priorities of the assessment model at FUA include:

Revelations about learning, assessment of the classroom experience, and constant improvement of teaching practices.

Efficient and equitable analysis of human and financial resources.

Integrative models of teaching methodologies and learning practices tailored to an international higher learning institution such as FUA.

Ongoing evaluation of the institution at large and how it seeks to fulfill its mission statement.

More specifically, a systemic view of the institution’s assessment areas can be seen in the central items within the dotted area of the following framework:

Assessment objectives are calibrated for the areas of examination with the overall goal of capturing a realistic and ongoing representation of quality, effectiveness, areas for improvement, and how each assessed activity contributes to the overall system.

As summarized in the framework, assessment practices at FUA include the following:

The assessment of learning:

  • Student assessment
  • Faculty assessment
  • Assessment of academic programs
  • The assessment of student services
  • The assessment of the organization:
  • Staff
  • Administration
  • Facilities
  • IT

Institutional assessment

Peer review and scientific committee for research initiatives

Aggregate results representing the above assessment areas are explored and analyzed to gage overall institutional performance in its service to the student body, which is the primary focus for mission fulfillment and improvement initiatives that shape FUA’s strategic planning. As seen in the framework, assessment, mission fulfillment, and the implementation of improvement are interconnected processes that bridge institutional practices and inform the institution’s strategic plan. The circular flow of how assessment weaves through the institutional culture and operativity is intended therefore as student-centric and, due to the institution’s unique educational model, aims to continuously improve the community and culture-sustained student learning outcome of the academic program’s stated learning objectives.

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