NSSE09 Benchmark Comparisons Report (NSSEville State)
11 pages
English

NSSE09 Benchmark Comparisons Report (NSSEville State)

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NSSEville State UniversityBenchmark ComparisonsAugust 2009NSSE 2009 Benchmark ComparisonsInterpreting the Benchmark Comparisons ReportTo focus discussions about the importance of student engagement and to guide institutional improvement efforts, NSSE created five Benchmarks of Effective Educational Practice: Level of Academic Challenge, Active and Collaborative Learning, Studenenent-t-t-Faculty Interaction, Enriching Educational Experiences, and Supportive Campus Environment. This Benchmark Comparisonss s Report compares the performance of your institution with your selected peers or consortium. In addition, page 9 provides twooo oootttheheherrr cocommpparisoarisonns bs beetwtweeneen yyoouurr sch schooooll an andd (a) (a) ababoovve-e-avaveragerage e ininstitustitutiotionnss wwithith bbeenncchhmmarkarkss inin th the e totopp 5500%% o off all NSSE all NSSE ininstitustitutiotionnss anandd comparisons between your school and (a) above-average institutions with benchmarks in the top 50% of all NSSE institutions and (b) high-performing institutions with benchmarks in the top 10% of all NSSE institutions. These displays allow you to determininineee if if if the engagement of your typical student differs in a statistically significant, meaningful way from the average student in thesee e comparison groups. They also provide more insight into how the student experience varies on your campus and in comparisononon groups. More detailed information ...

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NSSEville State University
Benchmark Comparisons August 2009
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons
Interpreting the Benchmark Comparisons Report To focus discussions about the importance of student engagement and to guide institutional improvement efforts, NSSE created five Benchmarks of Effective Educational Practice: Level of Academic Challenge, Active and Collaborative Learning, Student-Faculty Interaction, Enriching Educational Experiences, and Supportive Campus Environment. This Benchmark Comparisons Report compares the performance of your institution with your selected peers or consortium. In addition, page 9 provides two other comparisons between your school and (a) above-average institutions with benchmarks in the top 50% of all NSSE institutions and (b) high-performing institutions with benchmarks in the top 10% of all NSSE institutions. These displays allow you to determine if the engagement of your typical student differs in a statistically significant, meaningful way from the average student in these comparison groups. They also provide more insight into how the student experience varies on your campus and in comparison groups. More detailed information about how benchmarks are created can be found on the NSSE Web site at www.nsse.iub.edu/2009_Institutional_Report/.
Class and Sample Means are reported for first-year students and seniors. Institution-reported class levels are used. All randomly selected students are included in these analyses. Students in targeted or locally administered oversamples are not included.
Mean The mean is theweighted arithmetic average of the student level benchmark scores.
Benchmark Description & Survey Items A description of the benchmark and the individual items used in its creation is provided.
Statistical Significance Benchmarks with mean differences that are larger than would be expected by chance alone are noted with one, two, or three asterisks, denoting one of three significance levels (p<.05, p< .01, and p<.001). The smaller the significance level, the smaller the likelihood that the difference is due to chance. Please note that statistical significance does not guarantee that the result is substantive or important. Large sample sizes (as with the NSSE project) tend to produce more statistically significant results even though the magnitude of mean differences may be inconsequential. It is recommended to consult effect sizes to judge the practical meaning of the results.
Level of Academic Challenge (LAC)
Mean Comparisons
NSSEville State University compared with:
NSSEville State Mid East Public Eff ec t S iz e a a b c C las s M ean M e an S igFirst-Year 47.9 53.6 *** -.41 Senior 52.2 57.1 *** -.36 We g te y ge n e r, e nro m e nt s ta tus , a n ns t tut o na s ze . a b *p<.05 **p<.01***p<.001(2-ta ile d). c M e a n diffe re nc e divide d by the po o le d s ta nda rd de via tio n.
Distributions o Student Benchmark Scores FirstYear 100
75
50
25
100
75
50
25
Carnegie Class Eff e ct a c M e an S iz e53.1 *** -.39 56.9 *** -.33
Senior
NSSE 2009 Ef fe c t M ean S igS iz ea b c 53.7 *** -.43 57.0 *** -.34
0 0 NSSEville State Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 NSSEville State Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 No te : Ea c h bo x a nd whis ke r c ha rt plo ts the 5th (bo tto m o f lo we r ba r), 25th (bo tto m o f bo x), 50th (m iddle line ), 75th (to p o f bo x), a nd 95th (to p o f uppe r ba r) pe rc e ntile s c o re s . T he do t s ho ws the be nc hm a rk m e a n. S e e pa ge 2 fo r a n illus tra tio n. S e e pa ge s 10 a nd 11fo r pe rc e ntile va lue s .
Level of Academic Challenge (LAC) Items Challenging intellectual and creative work is central to student learning and collegiate quality. Colleges and universities promote high levels of student achievement by emphasizing the importance of academic effort and setting high expectations for student performance. Preparing for class (studying, read ing, writing, doing ho mework or lab work, etc. related to academic progr am) Number of assigned textbooks, books, or book-length packs of course readings Number of written papers or reports of 20 pages or more; number of written papers or reports of between 5 and 19 pag es; and number of written papers or reports of fewer than 5 pages Coursework emphasizes:Analysisof the basic elements of an idea, experience or theory Coursework emphasizes:Synthesisand organizing of ideas, information, or experiences into new, more complex interpretations and relationships Coursework emphasizes:Making judgmentsabout the value of information, arguments, or methods Coursework emphasizes:Applyingtheories or concepts to practical problems or in new situations Working harder than you thought you could to meet an instructor's standards or expectations Campus environment emphasizes: Spending significant amount of time studying and on academic work.
Box and Whiskers Key A box and whiskers chart is a concise way to summarize the variation of student benchmark scores. This display compares the distribution of scores at your institution, in percentile terms, with that of your comparison groups. The ends of the whiskers show the 5th and 95th percentile scores, while the box is bounded by the 25th and 75th percentiles. The bar inside the box indicates the median score, and the dot shows the mean score.
95thPercentile
75thPercentile
a Effect Size Effect size indicates the practical significance of the mean difference. It is calculated by dividing the mean difference by the pooled standard deviation. In practice, an effect size of .2 is often considered small, .5 moderate, and .8 large. A positive sign indicates that your institution’s mean was greater, thus showing an affirmative result for the institution. A negative sign indicates the institution lags behind the comparison group, suggesting that the student behavior or institutional practice represented by the item may warrant attention.
Box and Whiskers Charts A visual display of first-year and senior benchmark score dispersion for your institution and your selected comparison or consortium groups.
50thPercentile/Median (Bar) Mean(Dot) 25thPercentile
5thPercentile
a SeeContextualizingNSSEEffectSizesatwww.nsse.iub.edu/pdf/effect_size_guide.pdfforadditionalinformation.
Page2
Level of Academic Challenge (LAC) Items Challenging intellectual and creative work is central to student learning and collegiate quality. Colleges and universities promote high levels of student achievement by emphasizing the importance of academic effort and setting high expectations for student performance.
Mid East Public
NSSEville State
NSSE 2009
Mid East Public
0
Senior
Carnegie Class
NSSE 2009
Carnegie Class
b Sig
a Mean 53.1 56.9
50
25
NSSEville State
0
100
75
25
75
Distributions of Student Benchmark Scores FirstYear 100
50
NSSEville State University compared with:
Mid East Public Effect a b c Mean SigSize53.8 -.07 56.6 .05
a Mean 53.7 57.0
Effect c Size-.06 .01
b Sig
NSSE 2009
Effect c Size-.02 .02
Carnegie Class
Preparing for class (studying, reading, writing, doing homework or lab work, etc. related to academic program) Number of assigned textbooks, books, or book-length packs of course readings Number of written papers or reports of 20 pages or more; number of written papers or reports of between 5 and 19 pages; and number of written papers or reports of fewer than 5 pages Coursework emphasizes:Analysisof the basic elements of an idea, experience or theory Coursework emphasizes:Synthesisand organizing of ideas, information, or experiences into new, more complex interpretations and relationships Coursework emphasizes:Making of judgmentsabout the value of information, arguments, or methods Coursework emphasizes:Applyingtheories or concepts to practical problems or in new situations Working harder than you thought you could to meet an instructor's standards or expectations Campus environment emphasizes: Spending significant amount of time studying and on academic work.
Note: Each box and whiskers chart plots the 5th (bottom of lower bar), 25th (bottom of box), 50th (middle line), 75th (top of box), and 95th (top of upper bar) percentile scores. The dot shows the benchmark mean. See page 2 for an illustration. See pages 10 and 11 for percentile values.
a Class Mean First-Year 52.8 Senior 57.2 a Weighted by gender, enrollment status, and institutional size. b * p<.05 ** p<.01 ***p<.001 (2-tailed). c Mean difference divided by the pooled standard deviation.
Page 3
Level of Academic Challenge (LAC)
NSSEville State
Mean Comparisons
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons NSSEville State University
NSSE 2009
NSSEville State University compared with:
b Sig*** ***
Effect c Size.29 .28
a Mean 43.2 51.0
Mid East Public Effect a b c Mean SigSize42.0 *** .35 49.5 *** .38
100
75
0
25
50
Distributions of Student Benchmark Scores FirstYear 100
75
b Sig*** **
50
25
Effect c Size.28 .25
a Mean 43.3 51.6
Senior
Active and Collaborative Learning (ACL) Items Students learn more when they are intensely involved in their education and asked to think about what they are learning in different settings. Collaborating with others in solving problems or mastering difficult material prepares students for the messy, unscripted problems they will encounter daily during and after college.
NSSE 2009
Carnegie Class
0
Mid East Public
Active and Collaborative Learning (ACL)
Asked questions in class or contributed to class discussions Made a class presentation Worked with other students on projectsduring class Worked with classmatesoutside of classto prepare class assignments Tutored or taught other students (paid or voluntary) Participated in a community-based project (e.g., service learning) as part of a regular course Discussed ideas from your readings or classes with others outside of class (students, family members, co-workers, etc.)
NSSE 2009
Carnegie Class
NSSEville State
Mid East Public
NSSEville State
Mean Comparisons
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons NSSEville State University
NSSEville State
Page 4
Note: Each box and whiskers chart plots the 5th (bottom of lower bar), 25th (bottom of box), 50th (middle line), 75th (top of box), and 95th (top of upper bar) percentile scores. The dot shows the benchmark mean. See page 2 for an illustration. See pages 10 and 11 for percentile values.
a Class Mean First-Year 47.9 Senior 55.9 a Weighted by gender, enrollment status, and institutional size. b * p<.05 ** p<.01 ***p<.001 (2-tailed). c Mean difference divided by the pooled standard deviation.
Carnegie Class
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons NSSEville State University
Note: Each box and whiskers chart plots the 5th (bottom of lower bar), 25th (bottom of box), 50th (middle line), 75th (top of box), and 95th (top of upper bar) percentile scores. The dot shows the benchmark mean. See page 2 for an illustration. See pages 10 and 11 for percentile values.
NSSEville State
Mid East Public
Page 5
Mean Comparisons
Carnegie Class
NSSEville State
0
StudentFaculty Interaction (SFI)
Mid East Public
NSSEville State
NSSE 2009
Carnegie Class
NSSE 2009
Effect c Size.15 .52
NSSE 2009
b Sig* ***
Carnegie Class
Mid East Public Effect a b c Mean SigSize33.9 ** .19 41.1 *** .56
a Mean 34.6 42.0
0
25
50
Distributions of Student Benchmark Scores FirstYear 100
75
100
75
NSSEville State University compared with:
Senior
StudentFaculty Interaction (SFI) Items Students learn firsthand how experts think about and solve practical problems by interacting with faculty members inside and outside the classroom. As a result, their teachers become role models, mentors, and guides for continuous, life-long learning.
Discussed grades or assignments with an instructor Talked about career plans with a faculty member or advisor Discussed ideas from your readings or classes with faculty members outside of class Worked with faculty members on activities other than coursework (committees, orientation, student-life activities, etc.) Received prompt written or oral feedback from faculty on your academic performance Worked on a research project with a faculty member outside of course or program requirements
a Class Mean First-Year 37.5 Senior 52.8 a Weighted by gender, enrollment status, and institutional size. b * p<.05 ** p<.01 ***p<.001 (2-tailed). c Mean difference divided by the pooled standard deviation.
50
a Mean 35.2 41.7
b Sig***
Effect c Size.12 .53
25
Mean Comparisons
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons NSSEville State University
Note: Each box and whiskers chart plots the 5th (bottom of lower bar), 25th (bottom of box), 50th (middle line), 75th (top of box), and 95th (top of upper bar) percentile scores. The dot shows the benchmark mean. See page 2 for an illustration. See pages 10 and 11 for percentile values.
Page 6
Mid East Public
NSSEville State
a Class Mean First-Year 34.6 Senior 57.9 a Weighted by gender, enrollment status, and institutional size. b * p<.05 ** p<.01 ***p<.001 (2-tailed). c Mean difference divided by the pooled standard deviation.
NSSEville State University compared with:
Participating in co-curricular activities (organizations, campus publications, student government, social fraternity or sorority, etc.) Practicum, internship, field experience, co-op experience, or clinical assignment Community service or volunteer work Foreign language coursework / Study abroad Independent study or self-designed major Culminating senior experience (capstone course, senior project or thesis, comprehensive exam, etc.) Serious conversations with students of different religious beliefs, political opinions, or personal values Serious conversations with students of a different race or ethnicity than your own Using electronic medium (e.g., listserv, chat group, Internet, instant messaging, etc.) to discuss or complete an assignment Campus environment encouraging contact among students from different economic, social, and racial or ethnic backgrounds in a learnin communit or Partici ate where rou s of students take two or more classes to some other formal ro ram ethe
Carnegie Class
Carnegie Class
NSSEville State
Carnegie Class
NSSE 2009
NSSE 2009
Mid East Public
Enriching Educational Experiences (EEE)
NSSEville State
Senior
Effect c Size.56 1.09
50
25
Enriching Educational Experiences (EEE) Items Complementary learning opportunities enhance academic programs. Diversity experiences teach students valuable things about themselves and others. Technology facilitates collaboration between peers and instructors. Internships, community service, and senior capstone courses provide opportunities to integrate and apply knowledge.
25
50
b Sig*** ***
0
0
a Mean 27.1 38.5
75
75
100
Distributions of Student Benchmark Scores FirstYear 100
Mid East Public Effect a b c Mean SigSize27.4 *** .52 40.7 *** .93
a Mean 28.0 40.8
Effect c Size.49 .94
b Sig*** ***
NSSE 2009
Mid East Public
NSSEville State
Mean Comparisons
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons NSSEville State University
Note: Each box and whiskers chart plots the 5th (bottom of lower bar), 25th (bottom of box), 50th (middle line), 75th (top of box), and 95th (top of upper bar) percentile scores. The dot shows the benchmark mean. See page 2 for an illustration. See pages 10 and 11 for percentile values.
a Mean 61.6 58.2
b Sig
Effect c Size-.07 .08
NSSE 2009
Effect c Size-.07 .05
Carnegie Class
NSSEville State University compared with:
Mid East Public Effect a b c Mean SigSize59.3 .05 55.8 ** .21
a Class Mean First-Year 60.3 Senior 59.8 a Weighted by gender, enrollment status, and institutional size. b * p<.05 ** p<.01 ***p<.001 (2-tailed). c Mean difference divided by the pooled standard deviation.
NSSE 2009
0
Carnegie Class
Carnegie Class
NSSE 2009
Mid East Public
Supportive Campus Environment (SCE)
NSSEville State
0
75
100
Distributions of Student Benchmark Scores FirstYear 100
75
25
50
Campus environment provides the support you need to help you succeed academically Campus environment helps you cope with your non-academic responsibilities (work, family, etc.) Campus environment provides the support you need to thrive socially Quality of relationships with other students Quality of relationships with faculty members Quality of relationships with administrative personnel and offices
25
a Mean 61.6 58.8
b Sig
50
Page 7
Supportive Campus Environment (SCE) Items Students perform better and are more satisfied at colleges that are committed to their success and cultivate positive working and social relations among different groups on campus.
Senior
NSSEville State
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons With Highly Engaging Institutions
Interpreting the Top 10% and Top 50% Comparisons This section of the NSSE Benchmark Comparisons report allowsyoutoestimate the performance of your average student in relation to the average student attending two different institutional peer groupsidentified byNSSE fortheir high levelsof student engagement: (a) those with benchmark scores placing them in the top 50% of all NSSE schools in 2009 and (b) a those with benchmark scores in the top 10% for 2009.These comparisons allow an institution to determine if the engagement of their students differs in significant, meaningful ways from students in these high performing peer groups.
Example
LAC ACL SFI EEE SCE
NSSEville State Mean 57.1 50.3 37.3 21.8 60.9
NSSEville State compared with NSSE 2009 NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10% Mean Sig Effect size Mean Sig Effect size 55.8 * .10 60.5 *** -0.28 45.8 *** .28 50.7 -0.02 37.2 .01 42.0 *** -0.24 30.0 *** -.63 34.4 *** -0.98 64.7 *** -.21 69.7 *** -0.49
NSSEville State CAN conclude... The average score for NSSEville State first-year students is slightly above (i.e., small positive effect size) that of the average student attending NSSE 2009 schools that scored in the top 50% on Level of Academic Challenge (LAC). The average NSSEville State first-year student is as engaged (i.e., not significantly different) as the average student attending NSSE 2009 schools that scored in the top 10% on Active and Collaborative Learning (ACL). It islikelythat NSSEville State is in the top 50% of all NSSE 2009 schools for first-year students on Level of a Academic Challenge (LAC) and Active and Collaborative Learning (ACL).
a NSSEville State CANNOT conclude ... NSSEville State is in the top half of all schools on the Student-Faculty Interaction (SFI) benchmark for first-year a students. NSSEville State is a "top ten percent" institution on Active and Collaborative Learning (ACL) for first-year a students.
For additional information on how to understand and use the Top 50% and Top 10% section of the benchmark report, see www.nsse.iub.edu/2009_Institutional_Report/. a Precision-weighted means (produced by Hierarchical Linear Modeling) were used to determine the top 50% and top 10% institutions for each benchmark, separately for first-year and senior students. Using this method, benchmark scores of institutions with relatively large standard errors are adjusted substantially toward the grand mean of all students, while those with smaller standard errors receive smaller corrections. Thus, schools with less stable data, though they may have high scores, may not be identified among the top scorers. NSSE does not publish the names of the top 50% and top 10% institutions because of our commitment not to release individual school results and our policy against the ranking of institutions.
Page 8
Senior
a Weighted by gender, enrollment status, and institutional size. b * p<.05 ** p<.01 ***p<.001 (2-tailed). c Mean difference divided by the pooled standard deviation.
First-Year
Enriching Educational Experiences (EEE)
Senior
100
Note: Each box and whiskers chart plots the 5th (bottom of lower bar), 25th (bottom of box), 50th (middle line), 75th (top of box), and 95th (top of upper bar) percentile scores. The dot shows the benchmark mean. See page 2 for an illustration. See pages 10 and 11 for percentile values.
Page 9
Senior
First-Year
100
0
25
0
NSSEville State a Mean 52.8 47.9 37.5 34.6 60.3 57.2 55.9 52.8 57.9 59.8
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons With Highly Engaging Institutions NSSEville State University
First-Year
0
LAC ACL SFI EEE SCE LAC ACL SFI EEE SCE
Supportive Campus Environment (SCE)
25
First-Year
StudentFaculty Interaction (SFI)
Senior
Senior
25
Active and Collaborative Learning (ACL)
75
100
50
75
50
Legend
100
Level of Academic Challenge (LAC)
75
25
50
NSSEville State compared with NSSE 2009 NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10% a c a c Mean Sig Effect size Mean Sig Effect size 56.8***-.31 58.9***-.47 47.8.01 51.7**-.22 39.1-.08 43.7***-.30 31.0***.27 32.8.13 66.2***-.33 69.1***-.48 60.1*-.21 62.8***-.42 55.7.01 59.1*-.18 48.8*.19 54.2-.06 48.0***.56 54.1**.22 64.1**-.23 67.5***-.42
This display compares your students with those attending schools that scored in the top 50% and top 10% of all NSSE 2009 institutions on a particular benchmark.
NSSEville State Top 50% Top 10%
0
75
50
25
First-Year
0
Senio
100
75
50
First-Yea
a All statistics are weighted by gender, enrollment status, and institutional size. b Standard deviation is a measure of the average amount the individual scores deviate from the mean of all the scores in the distribution. c The 95% confidence interval for the population mean is equal to the sample mean plus/minus 1.96 times the standard error of the mean. d A percentile is the point in the distribution of student-level benchmark scores at or below which a given percentage of benchmark scores fall. e Degrees of freedom used to compute the t-tests. Values vary for the total Ns due to weighting and the equal variance assumption.
24
1.1
.1 .1 .0 .0 .1
ACTIVE AND COLLABORATIVE LEARNING (ACL) NSSEville State (N = 226) 47.9 17.2
80
13,910 49,681 186,503 71,118 19,461
76 75 75 78 79
13.8 13.5 13.5 13.0 12.9
31 31 32 35 37
Reference Group Comparison Statistics Deg. of Mean e Freedom Diff. Sig.
75
Distribution Statistics d Percentiles 5th 25th 50th 75th 95th
42
62
Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
54
ENRICHING EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCES (EEE) NSSEville State (N = 190) 34.6 13.8
SUPPORTIVE CAMPUS ENVIRONMENT (SCE) NSSEville State (N = 185) 60.3
Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
21.1
1.5
.1 .1 .0 .0 .1
27.4 27.1 28.0 31.0 32.8
13.7 13.5 13.4 13.4 13.7
53.8 53.1 53.7 56.8 58.9
1.0
. .1 .0 .1 .2
Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
42.0 43.3 43.2 47.8 51.7
STUDENTFACULTY INTERACTION (SFI) NSSEville State (N = 200) 37.5
28 31 31 36 36
25
19.1 18.9 18.8 18.1 18.3
.2 .1 .0 .1 .2
. 35.2 34.6 39.1 43.7
FirstYear Students
71 72 71 76 81
50
1.0
Mean Statistics
31
13.8
LEVEL OF ACADEMIC CHALLENGE (LAC) NSSEville State (N = 197) 52.8
. 18.6 18.4 19.2 20.6
.1 .1 .0 .1 .2
19 19 19 24 24
Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
58 61 61 67 69
47 50 50 56 58
59.3 61.6 61.6 66.2 69.1
13,457 48,265 181,666 80,458 25,370
51 50 51 54 55
78
11 11 11 17
8 8 8 11 12
12
26 25 27 30 32
17 17 18 22 23
.000 .000 .000 .867 .001
6.0 4.6 4.8 .2 -3.8
.329 .747 .364 .000 .000
92 94 92 94 97
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons a Detailed Statistics and Effect Sizes NSSEville State University
Mean
c SEM
SD
 ast u c Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
1.0 -1.3 -1.2 -5.9 -8.8
Page 10
. .088 .031 .236 .000
. 2.3 2.8 -1.6 -6.2
f Statistical significance represents the probability that the difference between the mean of your institution and that of the comparison group occurred by chance. g Effect size is calculated by subtracting the comparison group mean from the school mean, and dividing the result by the pooled standard deviation.
33 33 39 39
34
25
43
36 35 36 39 41
22 22 27 28
44 44 50 56
92
189 185 185 185 188
Effect g size
19.3
1.4
17.0 16.8 16.6 16.6 17.5
72 75 75 78 83
-.07 -.02 -.06 -.31 -.47
.52 .56 .49 .27 .13
.05 -.07 -.07 -.33 -.48
.501 .400 .421 .000 .000
.35 .28 .29 .01 -.22
. .12 .15 -.08 -.30
44 44 44 48 50
54 53 54 57 59
33
11
29 33 33 38 38
22
48
38
52 52 52 57 62
57
64 63 63 66 68
72 72 78 83
60
15,465 54,399 202,700 60,372 12,859
78
, 50,267 188,444 55,406 9,230
44
61
38 43 43 48 52
-1.0 -.3 -.9 -4.0 -6.1
7.2 7.5 6.5 3.6 1.8
.000 .000 .000 .000 .072
Reference Group Comparison Statistics Deg. of Mean e Freedom Diff. Sig.
6.5 4.4 4.9 .2 -3.1
Mean
 ast u c Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
c SEM
Page 11
SD
NSSE 2009 Benchmark Comparisons a Detailed Statistics and Effect Sizes NSSEville State University
17.2 19.5 17.1 9.9 3.8
.005 .490 .265 .003 .000
47 47 48 51 54
62 62 62 67 71
24 24 24 29 33
33
48 52 52 57 57
22
38 38 38 43 48
56
.000 .000 .000 .000 .008
, 60,495 215,808 48,344 7,863
57
43
67
50
60
e Degrees of freedom used to compute the t-tests. Values vary for the total Ns due to weighting and the equal variance assumption. f Statistical significance represents the probability that the difference between the mean of your institution and that of the comparison group occurred by chance. g Effect size is calculated by subtracting the comparison group mean from the school mean, and dividing the result by the pooled standard deviation.
19.7 19.5 19.3 18.8 18.5
29
1.3
79
86
13,730 60,032 214,214 67,011 14,092
.1 .1 .0 .1 .1
32 33 33 37 40
14.4 14.3 14.3 13.7 13.3
d A percentile is the point in the distribution of student-level benchmark scores at or below which a given percentage of benchmark scores fall.
143 140 139 140 142
86
60
46
70
54 51 54 61 66
28 28 33 39
39 39 44 56
56 56 61 72
17.2 17.4 17.4 16.9 17.2
.1 .1 .0 .1 .2
69 72 72 78 81
1.8
21.8
55.8 58.8 58.2 64.1 67.5
85
89
81 81 81 86 89
83 83 89 94
Effect g size
.38 .25 .28 .01 -.18
.05 .02 .01 -.21 -.42
56 58 58 64 69
42 44 44 53 56
.6 .3 .2 -2.8 -5.5
. .000 .000 .019 .463
. 11.1 10.9 4.1 -1.3
.583 .776 .856 .011 .000
.000 .002 .000 .873 .023
14,611 62,833 224,917 60,592 12,998
57 57 57 61 63
67 67 67 70 72
72
Seniors
a All statistics are weighted by gender, enrollment status, and institutional size. b Standard deviation is a measure of the average amount the individual scores deviate from the mean of all the scores in the distribution. c The 95% confidence interval for the population mean is equal to the sample mean plus/minus 1.96 times the standard error of the mean.
13.5
1.1
35
Mean Statistics
LEVEL OF ACADEMIC CHALLENGE (LAC) NSSEville State (N = 149) 57.2
73 69 72 77 81
13,362 58,794 210,114 65,863 13,741
89 92 92 94 97
69
28
11 11 17 22
40 37 40 48 55
27 25 28 36 43
12 11 13 18 25
4.1 1.0 1.6 -4.3 -7.7
.93 1.09 .94 .56 .22
. .53 .52 .19 -.06
.21 .05 .08 -.23 -.42
79 80 80 82 84
Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
. 41.7 42.0 48.8 54.2
ENRICHING EDUCATIONAL EXPERIENCES (EEE) NSSEville State (N = 142) 57.9 17.5
66
Distribution Statistics d Percentiles 5th 25th 50th 75th 95th
48
57
16.8
ACTIVE AND COLLABORATIVE LEARNING (ACL) NSSEville State (N = 158) 55.9 16.5
56.6 56.9 57.0 60.1 62.8
49.5 51.6 51.0 55.7 59.1
Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
.2 .1 .0 .1 .1
18.5 17.9 18.2 17.8 17.1
40.7 38.5 40.8 48.0 54.1
1.4
Mid East Public Carnegie Class NSSE 2009 Top 50% Top 10%
SUPPORTIVE CAMPUS ENVIRONMENT (SCE) NSSEville State (N = 140) 59.8
. .1 .0 .1 .3
1.5
. 20.8 20.9 21.3 22.0
.2 .1 .0 .1 .2
22 25 25 33 36
36
STUDENTFACULTY INTERACTION (SFI) NSSEville State (N = 151) 52.8
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