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Assignments and Grading

Assignments and Grading. The Effect of Grades. After Grades. Before Grades. The Grading Problem. No Standards You have to set the standards You are responsible for your own grading. Assignments and Exams. Should link to course objectives

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Assignments and Grading

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  1. Assignments and Grading

  2. The Effect of Grades After Grades Before Grades

  3. The Grading Problem • No Standards • You have to set the standards • You are responsible for your own grading

  4. Assignments and Exams • Should link to course objectives • Should allow you to see whether students are meeting goals • Make a Course Calendar • Check exams and assignments against objectives • Offer assignment variety • Have writing assignments • Exam test questions • Two column – problem solution in column 1, explanation in column 2 • Be Creative – maybe give a taste of professional life • May need to break large assignments into chunks • Include precise instructions

  5. Example of Creative Assignments • Advertisement • Briefing paper or “white paper” • Budget with rationale • Client report for an agency • Court brief • Diary of a fictional or real historical character • Executive summary • Instructional manual • Letter to the editor • Regulations, laws, rules • Research proposal addressed to a granting agency • Review of book, play, exhibit • Taxonomy of set of categories

  6. Make sure you give precise instructions

  7. Late Work • Penalties • Give them a taste of professional life • No Penalties • Assignments should be learning experiences, not performances • Year 1 – establish a policy and stick to it • Year 2 – revisit your policy

  8. Evaluating Assignments • Save the pen • Announce common errors in class and not on each students paper • You may be able to simply give a number or letter on the paper • Make a rubric • Establishes priorities – might even help your teaching • Tends to make grading consistent • Saves time • Share the rubric with the students • Let experience guide rubric revisions

  9. Assigning Grades • DON’T CURVE • Traditionally a curve is to establish the numbers of A’s, B’s, etc. by some standard, like the normal curve • What is all students deserve an A? • Today many students mean “give me points I haven’t earned”

  10. Letter Grades • How many divisions are there? • Here we use A, B, C, D, F • Assign each division a point value (F = 0, D = 1, C= 2, B = 3, A = 4) • Next assign weights to the assignments • Tests (Three) 50% (15%, 15%, 20%) • Papers (Two) 40% (20%, 20%) • Presentation 10% • Sarah gets the following grades • Tests: B, C, B • Papers: C, C • Presentations: B

  11. Letter Grades (cont’d) • Convert to numerical value • Tests: 3, 2, 3 • Papers: 2, 2 • Presentation: 3 • Apply weights • Tests: .15*3; .15*2; .20*3  .45; .30; .60  Sum = 1.35 • Papers: .20*2; .20*2  .40; .40  Sum .80 • Presentation: .10*3  .30 • Net sum is 2.45 • Convert back into a letter grade (round down to C or round up to B)

  12. Total Points • Generate a scale (say we assign a total of 1000 pts) • A 900 – 1000 • B 800 – 890 • C 700 – 790 • D 600 – 690 • F < 600 • Assign points/assignment • Tests: 150, 150, 200 • Papers: 200, 200 • Presentation: 100 • Just add up total points and consult the conversion table. • Having so many points allows for fine divisions

  13. Norm’s System A 90 – 105 B 80 – 89 C 70 – 79 D 60 – 69 F < 60

  14. Summary

  15. Notes • Grading should support learning not justifying your grade • Make grading transparent • Comments on paper should be constructive • Return work promptly

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