Ideas from Week three readings in BlendKit 2016.
I’ve been involved in assessment for quite a while. One of
the areas covered in this week’s reading is the need to provide assignments
that clearly are ready for assessment. I find that a rather odd thing to
present to an audience that does instruction for a living. Perhaps it is my
background in assessment and experience with accreditation, but the idea that
an assignment (or even course) would be presented for academic credit without
such things as objective and outcomes, expectations, and some sort of process
is foreign to me.
In order to have an assignment that clearly lays out to
students what they are expected to do, how they are to do it, and how they will
be graded as a result, the assignment needs universally present component.
Blendkit 2016 lists these as name of assignment, objectives,
recommended resources, expectations in terms of time, effort, and format, level
of group participation, process, and grading criteria.
In my experience, a well-organized assignment is a narrative
or roadmap. It can be organized chronologically, in terms of organization, or a
combination of the two. From a student perspective, I think the order is critical
as well.
I would probably combine these a bit more. Students will
want to know up front
- What the assignment is (title and description)
- What it is worth (in terms of points and also in terms of overall value in the total course grade), which wraps grading criteria and method such as rubric or objective quiz/test in as well.
- When it is due
- Overall process to complete it. That wraps expectations, level of work expected, and participation.
Using these as headings in the
assignment universally within a course, especially in a standardized format
helps students better understand the assignment and expectations without having
to search for information. Of course this is assuming that there isn’t a large
amount of variation in explaining the intricacies of the assignment. You mileage will vary.
Student generated test questions
The idea from the reading is that students be asked to come
up with their own questions for inclusion into an upcoming exam based on the
content.
This is another one of those AHA moments for me. I’d never
considered doing some sort of assessment by having students create their own
test questions. It is a great idea for an understanding check and also as a
potential diagnostic tool. You could
tell a lot about what students are learning by what they put down as potential
quiz questions, and probably even more by what is omitted. If you get nothing
back on larger segments of the content, that may indicate that there is not as
much emphasis, or that there is another problem. You may even find that they
have generated questions in areas that you had not considered.
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