1 / 38

Friday the 11 th of June: Supervision and Assessment

Friday the 11 th of June: Supervision and Assessment. 09.00: Cases on supervision (LK + LPJ) 11.00: Supervision - strategies and tools (LPJ) 12.00: Lunch 12.45: Assessment (AK) 15.00: Development of action plans – and peer review of action plans (AK) 15.30: Evaluation (AK). Role-play.

faith
Download Presentation

Friday the 11 th of June: Supervision and Assessment

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Friday the 11th of June:Supervision and Assessment 09.00: Cases on supervision (LK + LPJ) 11.00: Supervision - strategies and tools (LPJ) 12.00: Lunch 12.45: Assessment (AK) 15.00: Development of action plans – and peer review of action plans (AK) 15.30: Evaluation (AK) Supervision and Assessment

  2. Role-play • Six role plays illustrate supervising situations (meetings) • Imagine that your group is working on the project from yesterday • The group members assign roles between themselves, so that the outlined situation in the role play occurs • Each role play lasts approximately 15 minutes • Each role play is commented by 4-5 observers Supervision

  3. Supervision – strategies and tools Lars Peter Jensen Department of Control Engineering Fredrik Bajers Vej 7C, DK - 9220 Aalborg East Phone: + 45 96358740, e-mail: lpj@control.auc.dk URL: http://www.control.auc.dk/~lpj Supervision

  4. Forms of Supervision • Process supervision • Product supervision • Control Supervision • Laissez-faire Supervision Supervision

  5. Forms of Supervision - 1 Process supervision: • Sees the project as a cognitive process • Facilitates co-operation in the group • Starts reflexive processes • Asks facilitating (reflexive) questions in stead of pointing out solutions Supervision

  6. Forms of Supervision - 2 Product supervision: • Focus on theoretical knowledge • Focus on solutions, which are often given • Project report must be coherent • The product/construction (or part of) should be finished Supervision

  7. Forms of Supervision - 3 Control Supervision: • The group is tested • Thinks on the exam • The project period is one long exam • Is interested in the knowledge of the individual student Supervision

  8. Forms of Supervision - 4 Laissez-faire Supervision: • The students are left to themselves • Lack of engagement • General and occasional comments • Uses minimal time Supervision

  9. Forms of groups - 1 Supervision

  10. Forms of groups - 2 Supervision

  11. Characteristics for a well functioning group: • Common goal or objectives • Agreement about group standards • The members ”play” all the necessary roles • All group members respect each other Supervision

  12. Co-operation: group classification Supervision

  13. What might go wrong in the co-operation between supervisor and group? Supervision

  14. Project and documentation Study guide objectives Students expectations Supervisors expectations Different expectations Supervision

  15. Students opinions on supervision Good Supervision: • Overview in chaos • Cut through in critical situations • Solutions are not presented by the supervisor • Ask facilitating questions • The group is not controlled by the supervisor but by the group it self • Supervisor is well prepared and well informed Supervision

  16. Students opinions on supervision Poor Supervision: • Supervisor does not express opinions about affective questions • Supervisor does not give constructive feed back/criticism • Lack of interest in the project and/or the students • The supervisor has poor knowledge about the students’ work and work process • Supervisor takes ownership of the project and controls the students’ learning process Supervision

  17. Roles of the supervisor – good or poor ? • The group member– discipline oriented supervision with focus on product • Takes over responsibility for the project work • Very active in choice of theory and methods • Gives answers in stead of asking questions • The visitor– both discipline and problem oriented supervision with focus on process • Stands on the sideline, ready to kick or withdraw • Points out directions where to seek answers • The students own the project • The consultant– discipline or problem oriented laissez-fair supervision • Only activated on request • Only answers the questions asked • leave all decisions, planning and control to the group Supervision

  18. Tasks of a supervisor • Before the semester start: • Prepare project proposals • Plan project courses • In the beginning of a project: • Help to find appropriate literature • Help establishing contacts with companies ect. • Discussing the project proposal with the students • During the whole project period: • Commenting both oral and written presentations/memos/working paper • Continued assessment of the professional level of both group and individual • At the end: • Examination Supervision

  19. Tools for supervision • Learning objectives (Bloom) Supervision

  20. Levels of understanding - Bloom • Knowledge • memorize • Comprehension • translation,interpretation • Application • Use, in new situations • Analysis • uncover relations between entities • Synthesis • Building something new of the entities • Evaluation • Judging Supervision

  21. Tools for supervision • Learning objectives (Bloom) • Contracts Supervision

  22. Contracts Why ? • Create common expectations • Secure clear agreements Supervision

  23. Contracts How? Content could be: • Form of meetings • how often are you going to have meetings • how long meetings • where • agenda • chair of the meeting • students’ own objectives for the period • supervisors objectives for the period • areas of response to the “working papers” during the period: • Language, structure, details, methods • external contacts • response to the group process Supervision

  24. Tools for supervision • Learning objectives (Bloom) • Contracts • Students’ peer assessment Supervision

  25. Students’ peer assessment • Students in the same group reviewing each others written material • Students in the same group given small lectures for each other • Two groups acting as opponents for each other at seminars and exams Supervision

  26. Tools for supervision • Learning objectives (Bloom) • Contracts • Students’ peer assessment • Process analysis Supervision

  27. Process analysis - content Supervision

  28. Process analysis – example Supervision

  29. Tools for supervision • Learning objectives (Bloom) • Contracts • Students’ peer assessment • Process analysis • Facilitation Supervision

  30. Facilitation • summarizing • mirroring • asking open-ended questions • use why, how, what, where • dynamic list of question • feedback as rethinking loudly Supervision

  31. Tools for supervision • Learning objectives (Bloom) • Contracts • Students’ peer assessment • Process analysis • Facilitation • Questioning the team work Supervision

  32. Questioning team work - 1 Put on the students’ agenda when starting the project: • level of ambitions • how to share the work • discipline of meetings • how to solve conflicts • social relations Supervision

  33. Questioning team work - 2 • ask to the way the students organize the work and discuss the working process • ask to special project functions • discuss objectives for the organizational aspects • give individual consultations • feel the atmosphere - be present • let the students discuss • try to involve all the students Supervision

  34. A model for Supervision Present ”Normal”supervision Evaluate a focus with timeout’s Supervision

  35. Project supervision - preparation The Group (two days in advance) : • What have we accomplished (working papers) • What are we doing right now • Requested supervision • Agenda The Supervisor : • Read the working papers • Reflect upon and formulate questions to structure and details • Prepare for input to requested supervision Supervision

  36. Project supervision – meeting The Group : • Chairs the meeting • Takes minutes • Presents the points of the agenda • All participate in the discussions The Supervisor : • Facilitates the students’ own reflection by asking questions • Involves all students in the discussions • Secure reflections on: • Contracts, working processes, progress, time schedule Supervision

  37. Project supervision – follow up The Group : • Sends minutes of the meeting to the supervisor • Discusses and assesses the input from the supervisor • Revises working papers, time schedule etc. The Supervisor : • Reads the minutes and replies • Follows up on requested tasks Supervision

  38. Lunch until 12.45 Supervision

More Related