Title: Assessment in Online Courses: Practical Examples
1Assessment in Online Courses Practical Examples
- Dr. Roger Von Holzen
- Ms. Darla Runyon
- Dr. Phillip Heeler
- Northwest Missouri State University
2Heard in the Halls
- If we are to be required to assess educational
quality and learning by virtue of how long a
student sits in a seat, we have focused on the
wrong end of the student. - Laura Palmer Noone
3Heard in the Halls
- Every person putting the same amount of time
into the same subject matter, regardless of the
learners previous experience, aptitude for that
subject, or ability to learn, no longer makes
sense. - William Draves
4How do you do online exams?
- Question based on notion that online assessment
must follow assessment methods used on campus - Not necessarily true
- In an online environment
- Radical change to the role of the instructor
- Shift from the deliverer of content to student
mentor - Function of assessment techniques must also
change
5Online Assessment An Interactive Mentoring
Opportunity
- Need to move beyond the rhetoric that assessment
should be utilized as a teaching tool and not as
an evaluation mechanism - Use quizzes and tests as interactive mentoring
opportunities - Enable students to evaluate their own progress
through the course materials - Provide feedback on course content areas that
need further enhancement and/or development
6Beyond the Rhetoric
- Quizzes and tests should be viewed as means of
promoting learning - Open book and extensive testing time
- Should be only a small component of the overall
assessment strategy for the online course
7Beyond the Rhetoric
- Evolution from seat-time/credit hours to
outcomes-based education as a measure of learning - Acknowledging present reality
- What matters is whether the student has actually
learned something
8The New Role of Assessment
- Assessment techniques should be based on desired
learning outcomes - Assessment results should be used by students to
evaluate progress through course materials - Provide the instructor with
- evidence of effectiveness of course materials
- indications of content areas that need further
enhancement and/or development
9Assessment Strategy
- Cumulative process
- Aids in forming student assessment profiles
- snapshot of student understanding
- Profile constructed by
- building learning outcomes based on critical
course content - use of applicable assessment methods to determine
students understanding of learning outcomes
10Assessment Strategy
- Provides guidance to further develop conceptual
framework - Continuous process (formative)
- Should guide the student to mastery of the
learning outcomes - Assessment strategy becomes foundation for
developing the instructional design of the online
course
11Assessment Strategy
- Learning outcomes
- should be measurable through an applicable
assessment of that outcome - should provide evidence of mastery of the
learning outcome through student performance
12Learning Outcomes
- Determine critical course content
- Discern what the students should know or
accomplish based on the critical content - What must the student know in order to function
in authentic situations? - Decide what evidence is acceptable as proof of
knowledge or accomplishment of the learning
outcome - Selected student performance must furnish the
method of assessment of critical content
13Communication of Learning Outcomes
- Include in syllabus
- List in course introductory module
- List for each individual module or unit
- Convey in related activities and assignments
14Assessment Strategy Steps
- Assist faculty in integrating new assessment
techniques and developing overall assessment
strategy - Administer pre-assessment
- Provides guidance in the development of
appropriate learning activities - Present critical content through interactive,
instructional concepts and activities
15Assessment Strategy Steps
- Punctuate course with short assessment
opportunities - Provide student with performance feedback on
learning concepts and activities - Provide a diverse array of assessment methods to
reflect student understanding of the learning
outcomes - Provide opportunities for relearning and
reassessment
16Assessment Strategy Steps
- Develop a post-assessment (summative)
- Provides evaluation of the overall student
performance - Indicates ultimate mastery of critical content
and ability to incorporate content into
appropriate situations
17Additional Assessment Results
- Provide instructor feedback on content delivery
methods and techniques - Feedback directs the instructional redesign of
the course and the instructors role
18Online Assessment
- Provides an organized and systematic approach to
assessment - Digital exam building features
- Variety of traditional testing methods are
available - Multiple Choice
- True and False
- Fill-in-the-Blank
- Multiple Answer
- Ordering
- Matching
- Short Answer/Essay
- Options to pool questions and control the
delivery of the material
19Online Assessment
- Traditional methods should only be a small
component of the overall assessment strategy - Learning outcomes should be assessed using
applicable assessment techniques - Online delivery provides an environment conducive
to incorporating - a diverse array of assessment techniques
- strategies that may be employed across a variety
of course subject areas
20Online Assessment
- Flexibility of delivery allows for a more
student-centered approach to assessment and
feedback - Proctored exams
- Some situations may require on-site examinations
- Expenses and effort involved must be considered
Traditional methods should only be a small
component of the overall assessment strategy
21Issues of Academic Dishonesty
- Work closely with faculty as they discuss and
develop new perspectives on assessment - Academic dishonesty and conduct in an online
course should be examined as faculty design and
develop online assessment strategies
22Issues of Academic Dishonesty
- Academic dishonesty and honor code policies
should be clearly stated early in the course - Include in the course syllabus
23Issues of Academic Dishonesty
- Policy examples
- Students are responsible for submitting their own
work - Students who cooperate on examinations or other
work without authorization share the
responsibility for violation of academic
principles and are subject to disciplinary action
24Dealing with Plagiarism
- Web tracking services
- www.turnitin.com
- www.plagiarism.com
- Instructional design of course site, assignments
and exams - Communicate with students
25Practical Examples
- One-Sentence Summary
- Challenges students to answer the questions "Who
does what to whom, when, where, how, and why?"
about a given topic, and then to synthesize those
answers into a single informative, grammatical,
and long summary sentence.
26Practical Examples
- Minute Paper
- The instructor asks students to submit comments
related to the following two questions "What was
the most important thing you learned from this
lesson?" and "What important question remains
unanswered?" - Students then submit their responses by e-mail or
in a threaded discussion
27Practical Examples
- Punctuated Lectures
- Requires students to go through five steps
listen, stop, reflect, write, and give feedback - Students begin by listening/viewing a lecture or
demonstration. - Then, after a portion of the presentation has
been completed, it is stopped. - The students are asked to reflect on the lecture
or demonstration. - They then write down any insights they have
gained. - Finally, they submit feedback to the instructor
in the form of short notes.
28Practical Examples
- Concept Maps
- Drawings or diagrams showing the mental
connections that students make between a major
concept the instructor focuses on and other
concepts they have learned. - Students are asked to sketch the important
features of the geography around major concepts
such as democracy, racism, art, or free trade.
29Practical Examples
- Â Paper or Project Prospectus
- Paper Prospectus--a brief, structured first-draft
plan for a term paper or term project. - Prompts students to think through elements of the
assignment, such as the topic, purpose, intended
audience, major questions to be answered, basic
organization, and time and resources required. - Project Prospectus--focuses on the tasks to be
accomplished, skills to be improved, and products
to be developed.
30Practical Examples
- Analytic Memos
- Requires students to write a one- or two-page
analysis of a specific problem or issue - The person for whom the memo is being written is
usually identified as an employer, a client, or a
stakeholder who needs the student's analysis to
inform decision making
31Practical Examples
- Electronic Mail Feedback
- The instructor poses a question to the class, via
e-mail, about his or her teaching, and invites
student responses - Student respond to the e-mail question with a
personal message sent to the instructor's e-mail
account
32Practical Examples
- Exam Evaluations
- Allow instructors to examine both what students
think they are learning from exams and tests and
students' evaluations of the fairness,
appropriateness, usefulness, and quality of tests
or exams - May help provide verification as to the
authorship of exam answers
33References
- Angelo, T, Cross, P. Classroom Assessment
Techniques A Handbook for College Teachers
(Second Edition). 1993. - Boettcher, J, Conrad, R. Faculty Guide for
Moving Teaching and Learning to the Web. 1999. - Draves, W. Teaching Online. 2000.
- Kaczmarczyk, L. Accreditation and Student
Assessment in Distance Education Why We All
Need to Pay Attention. Proceedings of the 6th
Annual Conference on Innovation and Technology in
Computer Science Education. 2001.
34Dr. Roger Von Holzen, Director Center for
Information Technology in Education rvh_at_mail.nwmis
souri.edu
Ms. Darla Runyon Assistant Director/Curriculum
Design Specialist Center for Information
Technology in Education drunyon_at_mail.nwmissouri.ed
u
Dr. Phillip Heeler, Chairman Computer
Science/Information Systems Department pheeler_at_mai
l.nwmissouri.edu