your assignment:
Post on 22-Feb-2016
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MAKE THE BEST COOKIE POSSIBLE.
Your assignment:
So what would you make?
CAN YOU SUCCEED IN THIS TASK?
WHAT IS “SUCCESS” IN THIS TASK?
WHAT INFORMATION ARE YOU MISSING?
DID YOU KNOW THAT FAILURE TO GET IT RIGHT MAY COST YOU THOUSANDS OF $?
Now you will be graded….
So how would you rate this cookie?
Cookie 1
Don’t we need more information?
Allergic to chocolate? FGoing to serve it at a formal dinner? FFor three year olds in clean clothes? F
You have a lot of milk to use up? AYour kids (or you) deserve a reward? AYou need a chocolate fix? A
The reality is that ANY of these grades could be appropriate given the lack of detail in the assignment and the failure to provide a standard.
What is perfect in some situations can be completely wrong in another.
SO HOW ARE OUR STUDENTS SUPPOSED TO KNOW WHAT TO PRODUCE IN OUR
CLASSES?
So how are you supposed to know what to make?
This is what I was looking for….
Cookie 2
Student's perspective Professor’s
I have to write a paperI don’t know what it
should look like, but it needs to be good
I asked the teacher and he/she said look at the syllabus
The syllabus just provides logistical details—word counts, format, etc.
Everyone knows what a good paper looks like, so why do students badger me for details?
Why don’t students follow directions?
They should know how to do this by now
Students don’t seem to understand how to communicate in their fields
Rubrics can help clarify assignments and expectations
A RUBRIC OUTLINES A SET OF CRITERIA BY
WHICH STUDENT KNOWLEDGE, SKILLS, OR DISPOSITIONS/VALUES ARE ASSESSED.
What is a rubric?
But isn’t that just a fancy name for a checklist?
It’s not… Rubrics define levels of achievement
What they should be What they shouldn’t be
Connected directly to your purpose in the assignment (and, hence, the class SLOs)
An aid to guide your students toward success
Flexible and evolvingDeveloped along with
the assignment
Arbitrary or randomProvided to students
after the fact only or not at all
Rigid, forcing a specific grade, or static
Produced after the fact to fulfill assessment purposes
Purpose
So how do I produce an effective rubric?
Determine what skills, information, or dispositions you would like to measure with an assignment. We don’t assign projects/papers just to keep them busy—we expect students to show what they can do or have learned through these projects.
Rethink your normal patterns: do the assignments that we use really teach the skills that matter? Do we grade them on these skills or other (often) unstated skills?
Determine what level of success they need to demonstrate in these skills to achieve the various scores.
Back to the cookies….
What skill do we want to see? Creativity? Ability to produce an old standard? Ability to update an old standard? Not burning them? Ability to follow a recipe perfectly?
Could we better assess these skills by having them make cupcakes?
How burned is too burned? What is the “right” amount of crunch? Can we break these traits down into a range of numerical scores?
Sample Cookie Rubric
Criterion
4
3
2
1
Texture
Chewy, but solid
A little too soft or crunchy
Too crunchy or
gooey
Rock hard or
mushy
Level of cooking
Perfectly cooked
Slightly under or
over cooked
Under or over
cooked
Burnt offering or salmonella risk
Creativity
Innovative and clever
Somewhat creative
Very little creativity
Trite, boring.
CREATING AN
ORAL PRESENTATION ASSIGNMENT
So… let’s put this into practice
Starting point: What are we trying to accomplish or assess with the assignment?
Organize ideas and communicate orally in a way appropriate to audience, context, and purpose.
Use technology effectively to organize, manage, integrate, create, and communicate information, and ideas.
These show up in our
Department PLOs/class SLOs: 1. Students will be able to communicate Organic Chemistry
concepts in a professional context. 2. Students will be able to explain the connections between
Shakespeare’s time and his writing to a diverse audience.
ELEMENTS OF THE ASSIGNMENT:1 .
2 .
3 .
4 .
5 .
With your groups, create an assignment that will allow you to
measure student learning or skills.
So what are we going to look for?
Example: integration of appropriate visual elements (pictures/videos), spelling on slides, polish?
1.
2.
3.
4.
These become the criteria for the rubric.
Now we need to define what success and failure are for these categories
Start with the extremes: define a 4 and a 1, and then fill in the middle.
Make sure that there are clear gradations between the various scores.
1. D O E S I T L E AV E O U T K E Y FA C T O R S T H AT A F F E C T T H E G R A D E ? W E N E E D T O AV O I D C H A N G I N G T H E R U L E S AT H A L F T I M E
2. C A N A S T U D E N T U N D E R S TA N D H O W T O I M P R O V E A F T E R B E I N G A S S E S S E D ?
3. D O E S I T P R O V I D E D ATA T H AT D I R E C T LY R E L AT E S T O T H E I N D I V I D U A L P L O S A N D S L O S , O R D O E S I T LU M P I N F O R M AT I O N T O G E T H E R ? ( I . E . , A R E Y O U LU M P I N G E F F E C T I V E C O M M U N I C AT I O N A N D C O N T E N T K N O W L E D G E I N T O O N E C R I T E R I O N ? )
4. C H A N G E I T A S N E C E S S A RY — T H E G O A L O F A S S E S S M E N T I S I M P R O V E M E N T, S O I T ’ S A G O O D T H I N G W H E N Y O U R E A L I Z E T H AT T H E R U B R I C C O U L D B E B E TT E R .
One last step: test the rubric
Time to practice
1. Take one of your key assignments that you will be assessing this semester and create a rubric.
2. Exchange your rubric with another program and provide input/learn from their ideas.
USE YOUR AAC COACH THROUGHOUT THE PROCESS
WE ARE HERE TO SUPPORT YOU THROUGHOUT THE ASSESSMENT CYCLE
REMEMBER
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