National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE)
NSSE Survey Participation
NSSE Survey Participation
The National Survey of Student Engagement (NSSE) instrument is a national survey of
undergraduate quality that is administered to representative samples of students at
American colleges and universities. NSSE collects information annually about first-year
and senior students' participation in programs and activities that institutions provide
for their learning and personal development. The results provide an estimate of how
undergraduates spend their time and what they gain from attending college. The University
of Houston (UH) central campus has been participating in the NSSE survey since 2009
but starting in 2022, will only participate in odd years; hence, the data for 2022
are not available in the dashboards.
Engagement Indicators
The Engagement Indicator provides valuable information about a distinct aspect of student engagement by summarizing students' responses to a set of related survey questions. There are four sets of dashboards to cover each theme with each one starting with a trend dashboard to provide an overview of the theme over the years.
Academic Challenges
Challenging intellectual and creative work is central to student learning and collegiate
quality. This Engagement Indicator captures how much students' coursework emphasizes
challenging cognitive tasks such as application, analysis, judgment, and synthesis.
Experience with Faculty
Interactions with faculty can positively influence the cognitive growth, development,
and persistence of college students. Through their formal and informal roles as teachers,
advisors, and mentors, faculty members model intellectual work, promote mastery of
knowledge and skills, and help students make connections between their studies and
their future plans.
Learning with Peers
Collaborating with peers in solving problems or mastering difficult material deepens
understanding and prepares students to deal with the messy, unscripted problems they
encounter during and after college. Working on group projects, asking others for help
with difficult material or explaining it to others, and working through course material
in preparation for exams all represent collaborative learning activities.
Campus Environment
College environments characterized by positive interpersonal relations promote student
learning and success. Students who enjoy supportive relationships with peers, advisors,
faculty, and staff are better able to find assistance when needed, and to learn from
and with those around them.
Institutional Experiences
These items indicate how UH has influenced the students’ experiences in different areas.
Building a Sense of Community
In 2020 three questions were added to the NSSE survey regarding student sense of belonging
to find out if students feel like they can relate to others in the campus community.
Institution Contribution
Institution contribution focuses on how the institution contributed to the development
of the student related to marketable skills, critical thinking, work-related knowledge
and skills, collaboration with others, solving real-world problems, and becoming informed
and active citizens.
Class Experience
This group of questions covers student engagement and interaction in the learning
process, including class presentations, asking questions, participation in discussions,
class preparation, drafting writing assignments, facing course challenges, and participating
in art activities.
Time Distribution
This topic covers students’ use of time for reading and other activities, such as
commuting, preparation for coursework, time spent working off-campus, participating
in co-curricular activities, community service, and providing care for dependents.
Special Topics
Each year, institutions can choose to participate in a set of survey questions that touch on specific topics such as academic advising, cultural diversity, mental health, and high-impact practices. This section highlights some of the areas UH has participated in over the years.
High-Impact Practices
Certain undergraduate opportunities are designated "high-impact" because they positively
associated with student success. High-Impact Practices (HIPs) demand considerable
time and effort, facilitate learning outside of the classroom, require meaningful
interactions with faculty and students, encourage collaboration with diverse students,
and provide frequent and substantive feedback.
Experiences with Online Learning
This module measures instructional aspects that experts consider to be ideal for online
courses. The set also assesses how students engage in both online and hybrid courses,
their degree of comfort with online learning and experience of support, and ideas
about how the learning experience can be improved. UH participated in this module
in 2023.
Academic Advising
This module examines student experiences with academic advising, including frequency
of interaction with advisors and advising practices that reflect NACADA core values.
It also asks students to identify who has been most helpful.
Honors Education
The NSSE Honors Education Consortium began as a partnership with the National Collegiate
Honors Council. Items address motivation, academic exploration and risk-taking, tolerance
of ambiguity, curiosity, personal and career goals, and physical and mental well-being,
with the intention of making comparisons between honors and non-honors students at
participating institutions.
Development of Transferable Skills
This module examines activities that develop useful and transferable skills for the
workplace and beyond (such as verbal and written fluency, critical thinking, creative
thinking, problem solving, project management, and time management).
Learning with Technology
Developed in partnership with EDUCAUSE, these questions examine the role of technology
in student learning, focusing on usage, contribution to learning, and perceptions
of institutional support.
View archived NSSE reports here.