GWC subscribes to and follows the Guiding Principles for SLO Assessment developed by the Academic Senate for California Community College – adopted in Fall 2010:
Principle One: Faculty have the primary responsibility for developing assessment tools and determining the use of data that are collected, and there faculty engagement and active involvement in SLO assessment is essential.
Principle Two: Outcomes assessment is a process that should involve all appropriate participants at each level of the college, not just select groups or individuals.
Principle Three: SLOs and SLO assessment should be connected to the overall culture of the college through the college vision or values statement, program review processes, and college curriculum, planning, and budgeting processes.
Principle Four: SLOs should be clearly mapped and aligned throughout a course sequence and among various levels (course, program, institution) to achieve the most efficient and effective assessment.
Principle Five: SLO assessment should be as authentic as possible and should be minimally intrusive to the educational experience of student and the instructional planning and performance of faculty.
Principle Six: Rather than relying on one assessment method for all situations, effective assessment may benefit from a variety of methods, even within a single course, that can respond to different learning outcomes, teaching styles, and student learning needs.
Principle Seven: Assessment data do not exist in a vacuum and must be analyzed alongside all other factors that may impact achievement of outcomes.
Principle Eight: SLO Assessment processes and grading are different but mutually compatible activities and should complement rather than conflict with each other.
Principle Nine: Effective outcomes assessment requires a college commitment of sufficient staff and resources.
Principle Ten: SLO assessment of student learning outcomes is a process that is separate from faculty evaluation.
Principle Eleven: Faculty should engage in SLO development and assessment not because it is a requirement for accreditation but rather because it is good professional practice that can benefit programs and students.