Institutional Effectiveness is a process of ongoing self-evaluation on how well the institution is fulfilling its mission and achieving its goals.
Mission
The OIE will provide data, analysis, and research to support planning, decision-making, policy formulation, marketing, accreditation, and assessment at the academic and administrative departments of Antioch University.
Goal
The goal of the OIE is to provide high-quality data, analysis, and research in a timely manner, in formats and visualizations understandable by the intended audience. The OIE is responsible for providing official university statistics to satisfy both internal and external reporting needs.
OIE and other related departments at Antioch University
How are research and assessment similar?
Each is a question-driven process of investigation that includes collecting quantitative or qualitative data, analyzing those data, and interpreting the results.
How do research and assessment differ?
The purpose of research is to increase understanding of a topic or issue or to produce new knowledge.
The purpose of assessment is to create evidence to describe the effectiveness of an activity, function, program, office, department, division, or institution.
How does OIE differ from the Registrar’s Office?
Registrar | Institutional Research (OIE) |
---|---|
Academic records Transcripts Course scheduling Registration Degree planning Catalogs Academic policies Verifications | Institutional statistics Internal and external surveys Special research projects |
How OIE can help with external surveys
For the interest of data integrity, here are some general industry guidelines on which External Surveys the OIE should or should not be responsible for:
With the exception of state and federal institutional reporting (IPEDS, etc.), mandated routine reporting specific to an individual area should be conducted by that area. The responsible official in that area should, however, consult with the OIE whenever aggregate information outside of that area (e.g. enrollments) are required for a form. Examples of reporting that should be conducted not by OIE, but by the appropriate office include: athletics reporting, crime reporting (Clery), tax forms, etc. In general, straightforward office-to-agency reports should go through the appropriate office.
Who we are
- Teresa Kaldor, PhD
Director - Cynthia Cain Fitzgerald
Manager, Business Intelligence Analytics - Jessica Grater
Institutional Research Analyst