
Evaluation of Engineering Students’ Learning Outcomes: Creating a Culture of Continuous Quality Improvement
Author(s) -
Chia Pao Liew,
Marlia Puteh,
Li Li Lim,
Lih Jiun Yu,
Jully Tan,
Wai Tong Chor,
Kim Geok Tan
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
international journal of emerging technologies in learning/international journal: emerging technologies in learning
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.454
H-Index - 24
eISSN - 1868-8799
pISSN - 1863-0383
DOI - 10.3991/ijet.v16i15.23763
Subject(s) - accreditation , quality management , quality (philosophy) , continuous assessment , outcome (game theory) , computer science , engineering management , outcome based education , total quality management , analytics , learning analytics , process management , management science , knowledge management , engineering , operations management , data science , medical education , psychology , medicine , management system , pedagogy , mathematics , mathematical economics , epistemology , lean manufacturing , philosophy
Assessment and evaluation of outcomes and continuous quality improvement often lead to uneasiness among engineering educators, which is a barrier to implementing an effective system of results-assessment. The sophisticated evaluation models and analytical instruments adopted by higher learning institutions are believed to worsen this uneasiness, impeding the successful implementation of programme quality improvement. In this paper, the challenges in assessing and evaluating learning outcomes, types of programme outcome assessment model and an analytical tool known as Engineering Outcome Analytics developed by Tunku Abdul Rahman University College for the assessment were presented. Documents related to quality improvement from two higher learning institutions in Malaysia were reviewed and discussed based on the key elements of continuous quality improvement. The results can be used to avoid the shortcomings and adopt the best practices in continuous quality improvement. With proper understanding on the key elements of continuous quality improvement, and adoption of culminating assessment model and a highly integrated analytical tool, engineering educators and programme owners are expected to benefit from this re-search in three ways. First, it cultivates a culture of continuous improvement of quality by increasing the educators' willingness to evaluate results. Second, it enhances their existing analytical tools to reflect students' actual developments, resulting in significant continuous actions to improve quality. Third, it satisfies the accreditation requirements on outcomes-based assessment.