4 minute read

NSSE survey invites students to share undergraduate experience

By Jasper Bernstein STAFF WRITER

The University of Wisconsin-Madison, along with the University of Wisconsin System, is gearing up for the National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE), inviting students to share thoughts on their undergraduate experiences. Freshmen and

Advertisement

Charitable Trusts in 1998 and has been a staple of college surveys ever since. In 2013, the NSSE was revised to introduce and improve metrics, increase comprehensibility and modernize the terminology used.

The survey gathers data across five categories — engagement in purposeful educational activities, institutional

The university has elected to take the survey every three years since 2001. In 2020, the response rate was significantly lower than in previous years, with only 9% of respondents compared to 29% in 2017 and 23% in 2014.

“In years where we’ve had higher response rates, we’ve had more ability to [provide

NSSE provides us with an initial round of that data summary that eventually gets posted on our website,” said Lazenby. “We also work to write several shorter reports that try and condense some of that — NSSE has many questions, and so we write shorter reports to condense that information down into more digestible pieces to

Mason Waas

The Daily Cardinal is a nonproft organization run by its staff members and elected editors. It receives no funds from the university. Operating revenue is generated from advertising and subscription sales.

The Daily Cardinal is published weekdays and distributed at the University of WisconsinMadison and its surrounding community with a circulation of 10,000.

Capital Newspapers, Inc. is the Cardinal’s printer. The Daily Cardinal is printed on recycled paper. The Cardinal is a member of the Associated Collegiate Press and the Wisconsin Newspaper Association.

All copy, photographs and graphics appearing in The Daily Cardinal are the sole property of the Cardinal and may not be reproduced without written permission of the editor in chief. The Daily Cardinal accepts advertising representing a wide range of views. This acceptance does not imply agreement with the views expressed. The Cardinal reserves the right to reject advertisements judged offensive based on imagery, wording or both.

Complaints: News and editorial complaints should be presented to the editor in chief. Business and advertising complaints should be presented to the business manager.

Letters Policy: Letters must be word processed and must include contact information. No anonymous letters will be printed. All letters to the editor will be printed at the discretion of The Daily Cardinal. Letters may be sent to opinion@ dailycardinal.com.

Editorial Board Graham Brown • Em-J Krigsman • Anupras Mohapatra • Jessica Sonkin •

Priyanka Vasavan • Sophia Vento • Ethan Wollins

Board of Directors

Scott Girard, President • Herman Baumann • Ishita Chakraborty • Don

Miner • Nancy Sandy • Phil Hands

• Josh Klemons • Barbara Arnold • Jennifer Sereno • Max Lenz

© , The Daily Cardinal Media Corporation ISSN -5 98 seniors began to receive emails on Wednesday with an invitation to the survey, providing feedback intended to help improve the university.

Over 6.5 million students across 1,700 institutions have taken the survey since its start in 2000. Headquartered and founded at Indiana University’s School of Education, NSSE provides its institutions with reports and comparisons that allow them to measure how their students compare to those at similar institutions.

“[The NSSE asks] really well researched questions about pieces of the student experience. Some of that is participation in high impact practices — research or study abroad, things about your academic experience,” said Sara Lazenby, an institutional policy analyst for UW-Madison’s Data, Academic Planning and Institutional Research o ce (DAPIR). “With a survey that hundreds of institutions are participating in, we not only get our results, but we get the results of other universities across the country.”

Participating institutions pay upwards of $8,460 for access to the survey. The NSSE received its initial financial support from the Pew academic requirements, attitudes towards the campus atmosphere, estimates of personal growth, and personal background and demographic details.

“[NSSE provides] a really nice set of longitudinal data that lets us look at comparison over time on particular questions,” said Lazenby.

DAPIR, a recentlyannounced fusion between UW-Madison’s Academic Planning and Institutional Research (APIR) and the Office of Data Management and Analytics Services (ODMAS), has taken the lead on administering NSSE.

“We provide institutional support for NSSE ... working with them to identify the populations of students that should get the survey and working with [the Institutional Review Board] to get permissions to make sure that we’re in compliance with research protocols,” explained Lazenby. “Then we work with on-campus units like university marketing and communications to come up with the promotional materials for NSSE that are encouraging students to respond.” departmental reports],” said Lazenby. “In years that we have had low response rate — 2020, when NSSE was in the field as the pandemic shutdown happened, that really limited our ability to do some of those more custom reports.”

Promotional materials for NSSE can be found around campus, notably in dining halls.

Feedback from 2020’s survey was generally positive. According to the survey, 89% of seniors rated their UW-Madison experience as good or excellent, 88% would attend UW-Madison again and 91% rated the academic quality as good or excellent, significantly higher than peer institutions. Additionally, students reported higher quality interactions with academic advisors, faculty, student services sta , administrative sta and other students compared to other institutions.

The survey also showed that UW-Madison students scored high on four areas laid out in the ‘Wisconsin Experience’ — intellectual confidence, empathy and humility, relentless curiosity and purposeful action.

DAPIR and the NSSE will analyze the results as the survey closes on May 14, creating some of these custom reports upon request.

“Once the survey is closed, help us then understand di erent areas of the university.”

Lazenby also noted feedback from the survey has helped to identify specific areas of improvement for the school.

“[At one point,] we noticed that our responses on questions about advising were less positive than some of our peer institutions. And that eventually led to the creation of the O ce of Undergraduate Advising as well as some other investments to add additional academic advisors across campus in an e ort to improve that student experience with academic advising,” said Lazenby.

DAPIR aims to increase their response rate by sending email reminders to students who haven’t finished the survey yet. Additionally, students who finish the survey before April 15 will be automatically entered into a ra e to win one of 50 Amazon gift cards worth $25 each.

“It’s always nice when we do get students to respond. It helps us improve the university. It helps us have the data to know what the students feel about their experience,” said Lazenby. “Really, we do take the responses of students to NSSE really seriously and act to improve on that.”

This article is from: