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echniques

ssessment. echniques. Diane W. Creel, Assessment Coordinator Northern Virginia Community College dcreel@nv.cc.va.us. DIRECT MEASURES: ASSIGNMENTS PROJECTS PRODUCTS PAPERS/THESES EXHIBITIONS PERFORMANCES CASE STUDIES CLINICAL EVALUATIONS ORAL EXAMS INTERVIEWS TESTS EXAMS.

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echniques

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  1. ssessment echniques Diane W. Creel, Assessment Coordinator Northern Virginia Community College dcreel@nv.cc.va.us

  2. DIRECT MEASURES: ASSIGNMENTS PROJECTS PRODUCTS PAPERS/THESES EXHIBITIONS PERFORMANCES CASE STUDIES CLINICAL EVALUATIONS ORAL EXAMS INTERVIEWS TESTS EXAMS

  3. INDIRECT MEASURES: SELF-REPORT SURVEYS GRAD SURVEYS EMPLOYER SURVEYS Useful for understanding the perceptions of stakeholders but do not “measure” learning.

  4. CATs P.T.A.

  5. C.A.T. Classroom Assessment Technique Thomas Angelo and Patricia Cross

  6. Classroom Assessment • Small-scale (classroom) • Continual • Conducted by teachers • What have students • learned in this classroom?

  7. The First C.A.T. Minute Paper Time/Energy requirements: Faculty to prepare - LOW Students to respond - LOW Faculty to analyze - LOW

  8. The Second C.A.T. Concept Maps Time/Energy requirements: Faculty to prepare - MEDIUM Students to respond - MEDIUM Faculty to analyze - MEDIUM TO HIGH

  9. The Third C.A.T. Process Analysis Time/Energy requirements: Faculty to prepare - MEDIUM Students to respond - HIGH Faculty to analyze - HIGH

  10. Other Cats: Metaphors: As a learner, I am ______________ Critical thinking is _____________ Outlines: Supply outline with main ideas Supply outline with details Supply process analysis or steps in problem solving with blanks to fill in Five minute or one sentence summary WDHWWWH (Who did what to whom, where, when, how?)

  11. Directed paraphrasing: explain to your 12-year old cousin or your mother or your client or your classmate……. Matrix Magic: Provide an incomplete table to be filled in France US Britain Neoclassicism Impressionism

  12. Grades Don’t Count

  13. Of course they do IF THE FACTORS THAT COUNT FOR SCORING ARE EXPLICIT FROM THE OUTSET

  14. P.T.A.

  15. PTA is a process of taking what we already do -- record grades -- and translating that process into an assessment device. • Advantages: • Uses information that is already available • Brings to consciousness the mostly subconscious processes that go into recording grades • Can be applied at the level of the institution, department, curriculum, course, single class, or classroom assignment. • Doug Eder, SIU, http://www.siue/~deder/assess/cats/pta.htlm

  16. Choose a test or assignment that tests central goals/objectives of the course, program, major. Identify the traits (factors) that will count in the assessment. For each trait, construct a 3 - 5 point scale.

  17. Resources: 1. Effective Grading, Barbara E. Walvoord and Virginia Anderson, Jossey-Bass, 1998. 2. Learner-Centered Assessment on College Campuses, Mary E. Huba and Jann E. Freed, Allyn and Bacon, 2000. 3. The Rubricator, Http://www.rubrics.com 4. Examples from Southern Illinois University, Doug Eder, Http://www.siue.edu/~deder/assess/cats/pta.html

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