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Writing Outcomes for Assessment Middlesex Carnegie Summer Institute

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Title: Writing Outcomes for Assessment Middlesex Carnegie Summer Institute


1
Writing Outcomes for AssessmentMiddlesex
Carnegie Summer Institute
  • June 9, 2005
  • Patrick Nellis
  • Valencia Community College

2
Objectives
  • Engage in a Conversation on Assessment
  • Design Assessable Learning Outcomes
  • Consider the Implications for Teaching

3
What does it mean to use a learning-centered
approach?
Lets contrast a learning-centered approach
with a content-centered approach. Consider the
following questions.
4
How do you begin planning for your course or unit?
  • A Select what topics should be covered in the
    course/unit.
  • B Decide what students should know or be able to
    do after they complete the course/unit.

5
How do you design the content for your
course/unit?
  • A Select a textbook that includes the topics you
    want to cover in the course/unit and decide in
    what order to cover them.
  • B Choose the themes, concepts, procedures,
    skills, or issues that students must understand
    to be able to do the things you want them to do.

6
How do you evaluate your students?
  • A Decide what should be included on tests and
    how many tests there should be.
  • B Provide students ways to demonstrate their
    levels of proficiency (may or may not be tests)
    and the criteria their demonstrations will be
    measured against.

7
There are no wrong answers. The different
answers represent differences in philosophy and
approach.
  • A responses indicate a content-centered
    approach is guiding teaching practices.
  • B responses indicate a learning-centered
    approach is guiding teaching practices.

8
About Learning
  • Learning is a complex process of
    interpretation-not a linear process
  • Learners create meaning as opposed to receive
    meaning
  • Knowledge is socially constructed (importance of
    peer-to-peer interaction)
  • National Research Council. Knowing What Students
    Know, 2001.
  • Slide adapted from Peggy Maki.

9
  • People learn differentlyprefer certain ways of
    learning
  • Deep learning occurs over time
  • Meta-cognitive processes are a significant means
    of reinforcing learning

Knowing What Students Know, 2001, National
Academy Press Slides adapted from Peggy Maki
10
Learning-centered
11
Learning-centered
12
Cycle of Assessment
1 Form Learning Outcomes
2 Develop Assessments
4 Assess and Revise as Needed
3 Design Instructional Activities
13
Cycle of Assessment (Reality)
1 Form Learning Outcomes
2 Develop Assessments
4 Assess and Revise as Needed
3 Design Instructional Activities
14
One Sentence Summary
  • Assessment is an ongoing process aimed at
    understanding and improving student learning
    (Angelo Cross, 1993).
  • It starts with the Learning Outcomes and
    includes early and frequent feedback to and from
    students (formative) as well as evaluation of
    levels of mastery (summative).
  • Assessment requires explicit, public
    expectations and criteria based on high standards
    for quality.

15
Levels of Assessment

Institutional Effectiveness
Program Review
Program
Course
Course
Classroom
16
Alignment of Outcomes
17
Sgt. Bilko Method

Its simple you figure out what they want find
the quickest, least damaging way to respond send
off a report and then forget it.
18
Five Years On
  • What do you expect your students to know and be
    able to do?
  • What do you do in your classes or in your
    programs to promote this kind of learning or
    development?
  • How do you want the student to be different?

19
What If Grading was Not Allowed ?
  • What methods of assessment would you use to
    capture evidence of student learning?
  • Discuss at your tables, prepare to report out.

20
Learning Outcomes
  • Focus on the student, not the professor
  • Focus on the learning that results from the
    course
  • Integrate the knowledge, skills, and beliefs
    essential to the discipline
  • Help students develop real-world, lifelong
    competency

See Huba and Freed, Learner-centered Assessment,
Chapter 4
21
Fragmented Learning
22
Learning the Core
23
Learning the Core
(Richard Paul)
24
Putting the Work in Workshop
  • Identify Learning Outcomes
  • Choose Assessment Procedures
  • Brainstorm Learning Activities
  • Identify Resources to Use

25
Assumptions Underlying Teaching
Actual Practices
Assumptions Underlying Assessment Tasks
Actual Tasks
Peggy Maki
26
Gather Evidence
Interpret Evidence
Mission/Purposes Learning Outcomes
How well do we achieve our outcomes?
Enhance teaching/ learning inform institutional
decision- making, planning, budgeting
Peggy Maki
27
Assessing Outcomes by Course-Embedded Assessment
  • Assessment tasks or assignments that are an
    integral part of a students work in a course and
    that also provide evidence of outcome mastery.
  • A gauge of Are they getting it?
  • See Donald Farmer, Kings College,
    Course-Embedded Assessment A Teaching Strategy
    to Improve Student Learning

28
Authentic Assessment
  • Projects, papers, performances, etc. that require
    students to directly reveal the abilities that
    instructors desire. (Huba and Freed)
  • The testing of a students ability to use
    knowledge and skills to create a complex or
    multifaceted product or task. (Stiehl and
    Lewchuk)

29
Core Competencies
  • Think
  • Value
  • Communicate
  • Act

30
THINK
  • analyze data, ideas, patterns, principles,
    perspectives
  • employ the facts, formulas, procedures of the
    discipline
  • integrate ideas and values from different
    disciplines
  • draw well-supported conclusions
  • revise conclusions consistent with new
    observations, interpretations, or reasons

31
Evidence of Learning?
  • TVCA Integration Projects
  • College wide Learning Days
  • Learning Evidence Team
  • Think Project
  • Think Rubric
  • Collect samples of student work and score them,
    report patterns in the evidence

32
Discipline Perspective
  • Work with one or two others in your discipline
  • What does critical thinking look like from your
    discipline?
  • Note that professional associations have much to
    say on this topic
  • Make notes

33
Collaborative Processes
  • Development of learning outcomes.
  • Development of criteria and standards of judgment
    (scoring rubrics)
  • Selection or development of methods to assess
    student work

34
Next Steps
  • Keep the purpose in mind to assess learning so
    we can improve learning.
  • Imagine the implications for teaching.
  • Form teams to experiment with these ideas.

35
PMI
  • Note something that was a Plus (you liked)
  • Note something that couldve been better (a
    Minus)
  • Note something that could have an Impact on how
    you teach (Impact)
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