Network partners have been curating tools and methods suitable for classroom or program-level assessment of entrepreneurial mindset (EM). As you explore the resources below, keep these three key things1 in mind:
1Per assessment experts Stiggins and Chappuis (2011). View their works here.
Provided by faculty from Western New England University, University of Portland, University of Washington Tacoma, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and The Ohio State University.
Determine the best type of assessment tool for your use of EM!
After canvassing thousands of Engineering Unleashed cards to curate assessment resources, faculty developed this online course and navigator tool to help you select and use the assessment method(s) that work best for your context. You'll also gain confidence in writing publications based on assessment work.
Provided by faculty from Bucknell University, The Ohio State University, Rowan University, University of New Haven, and University of Washington at Tacoma.
Help students represent and organize their knowledge of EM.
Concept maps are a quick, visual classroom activity to gain a snapshot of student perception of EM. Use the Concept Map Toolkit to guide students to express their understanding through the creation of propositions that connect concepts to each other.
Provided by faculty from Arizona State University, Ohio Northern University, and Milwaukee School of Engineering.
With a focus on engaging members from all KEEN partner institutions, the Determining What Works team used a well-established approach to identifying consensus across the network to develop a list of observable behaviors that are present in students who embody the entrepreneurial mindset. Reach out to any member of our multi-institutional team to get more information:
Provided by faculty and staff from University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Faculty and staff from UNC-Chapel Hill created toolkits for formative assessment in design, making, and makerspaces. Combine “troublesome knowledge” prompts with stakeholder/audience/context prompts to have your students create short, in-class mini-making projects. Then use the example formative assessment rubrics to measure the 3Cs.
Provided by faculty from The Ohio State University.
The 3Cs Assessment Toolbox contains direct and indirect instruments for each C - Curiosity, Connections, and Creating Value. Explore results from implementing these evidence-based assessments in first-year engineering courses at OSU, and use these practices in your own context to increase student scores on the 3Cs.
Community benefits:
Partner benefits: