Title: Designing and Assessing Student Writing
1Designing and Assessing Student Writing
- presented by
- Judith M. Davis, Director
- Writing Technology Laboratory
- Hampton University
- 18 November 2002
2Why write?
- Are students writing to learn? Or are students
writing to demonstrate knowledge? - What are the goals and objectives of the course?
How will the writing assignment fit those goals
and objectives? - How much writing, what types of writing, and what
specific assignments will help the student to
achieve those objectives?
3What are the goals and objectives?
- Hampton University
- School
- Department
- Course
- Assignment
4What are the purposes for writing?
- Writing to learn
- Writing to demonstrate knowledge
- Writing to produce polished products
5What types of writing?
- abstracts
- case studies
- essays
- research papers
- term papers
- lab reports
- articles
- reading responses
- journals
- literature reviews
- scripts
- arguments
- analyses
- instructions
- process descriptions
- essay tests
6How do writers write?
- Fluency
- ? Form
-
- ? Correctness
7What are levels of cognitive demand?
- What is the students level of content mastery?
- Through what cognitive levels must the students
pass in order to complete the assignment? - How can assignments be broken down and sequenced
to lead students through successive levels of
cognition?
8Blooms Taxonomy(lower order thinking skills)
- Knowledge level
- Define, describe, distinguish, identify,
indicate, list, recall, show, state, tell - Comprehension level
- Compare, conclude, contrast, demonstrate,
differentiate, estimate, explain, illustrate - Application level
- Apply, construct, develop, plan, solve, test
9Bloom Taxonomy(higher order thinking skills)
- Analysis level
- Analyze, classify, discriminate, distinguish,
explain, recognize, support - Synthesis level
- Create, derive, develop, formulate, propose,
suggest, synthesize - Evaluation level
- Choose, decide, defend, evaluate, judge, select
10How can I get the writing I want?
- Define goals and objectives.
- Break large projects into smaller writing
assignments. - Sequence assignments to correspond to students
increasing mastery. - Remember that all writing does not have to be
graded. Plan some assignments that allow
students to write to learn.
11How can I get the writing I want?
- Schedule dates for preliminary assignments
leading up to a large project. - Consider how the project(s) will be evaluated
(both as individual assignments and in the
broader context of the course grade). - Put your assignments in writing and include
evaluation criteria on the assignment sheet.
12How can I use feedback to help students to grow
as writers?
- Distinguish between formative and summative
feedback. - Formative
- use for journals, informal writing, ungraded
assignments, and drafts - focus on content, organization, and development
- Summative
- use for final drafts and major projects
- focus on content, as well as style and mechanics
- Always point out the best part of the writing.
13How can I get the writing I want?
- To address difficulty in the writing, first
determine the students stage of development in
relation to the project - fluency?form?correctness
- Address global concerns like organization and
development before local problems like style and
mechanics. - Realize that all errors are not created equally.
14How can I get the writing I want?
- Use a three-tiered system for comments
- identify the problem
- explain the problem
- offer several options for revision
- Be sure that summative comments (and the grade)
fit the evaluation criteria spelled out in the
assignment sheet. - Use a rubric that makes the evaluation clear.
15Tools for effective feedback
- Assignment sheet
- Preliminary writing and planning sheets
- Peer review sheets
- Self-evaluation instruments
- Formative comments on preliminary drafts
- Clear, summative comments on final drafts
- Grading rubrics
16Checklist for essay exam questions
- What knowledge is the questions designed to test?
- What is the relationship between the test
question and other writing assignments in the
course? - How will responding to the question enhance the
students learning?
17Checklist for essay exam questions
- Is the question phrased clearly? Does it use
verbs to indicate desired method of development? - Is the students knowledge level in the course
consistent with the cognitive level implied by
the question? - Do students have adequate time to answer the
question? - Are evaluation criteria clearly specified?
18Sample Assignment Sequence
- Readings or content material
- Assignment sheet
- Preliminary writing assignments
- exploratory writing
- library research project
- Preliminary draft/peer review/formative feedback
- Revision plan/exercises/conference
- Self-evaluation?rubric
- Final draft/summative feedback?rubric
19English 218--Instructions
- Readings on collaborative writing, audience
analysis, graphic design, and instruction writing - Audience and task analyses
- Assignment sheet review
- Daily memos
- Rough draft?user testing?guided peer review and
formative instructor feedback - Final draft?self evaluation/summative instructor
feedback (both with rubrics)