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Anna Espasa

Thinking Writing - Mary Queen - University of London - 0 views

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    This site is a guide to writing-intensive teaching and learning. Developed in Queen Mary, University of London, it is funded and promoted by the LTSN Generic Centre. It is for all academic staff interested in different approaches to teaching and learning.
Anna Espasa

Biggs & Simpson - 2 views

shared by Anna Espasa on 26 Oct 10 - No Cached
sidney2014 liked it
Teresa Guasch

Rubrics: Tools for Making Learning Goals and Evaluation Criteria Explicit for Both Teac... - 1 views

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    Exemple de rúbrica (coneixement conceptual)
Teresa Guasch

Google Drive: A Better Method for Giving Students Feedback | Fluency21 - Committed Sard... - 2 views

  • teachers
  • can go quickly to Drive,
  • and make “live” comments and corrections on the student’s paper.
  • ...8 more annotations...
  • To make a comment simply highlight a section with your cursor and click the “comment” button. You can add as little or as much text as you would like. If you’re like me, you’ll find yourself giving students more feedback, more often, and in less time, thanks to Google Drive.
  • You can track the history of revisions
  • You can explore manytools for teachers 
  • to leave my students voice notes
  • using the free Learnly Voice Comments tool
  • you can incorporate your own spoken comments into any Google Drive document
  • YouTube
  • As a result their writing and research skills will improve and the feedback process will become more fluid and enjoyable for you.
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    "The share/feedback feature is a really powerful teaching tool."
Anna Espasa

REAP - Re-engineering Assessment Practices in Higher Education - 3 views

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    REAP is a project on assessment and feedback. It's from the University of Strathclyde (Glasgow). Leaded by prof. David Nicol
Anna Espasa

20 ways to provide effective feedback to your students - 2 views

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    From Educational Technology and Mobile Learning. A resource of educational web tools and mobile apps for teachers and educators.
Teresa Guasch

BBC News - Does confidence really breed success? - 0 views

  • Forsyth and Kerr studied the effect of positive feedback on university students who had received low grades (C, D, E and F). They found that the weaker students actually performed worse if they received encouragement aimed at boosting their self-worth.
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    "Forsyth and Kerr studied the effect of positive feedback on university students who had received low grades (C, D, E and F). They found that the weaker students actually performed worse if they received encouragement aimed at boosting their self-worth."
Teresa Guasch

Andrew C. Butler - 1 views

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    Interessant el seu estudi en el que confirma que un feedback explicatiu contribueix a millors resultats en "transfer questions".
Teresa Guasch

Times Higher Education - The spelling mistake: Scene one, take one - 0 views

  • Research is at an early stage, but is causing widespread interest. Most lecturers add notes in the margins of students' essays, normally fewer than ten words. However, because tutors can talk as they correct the work, much more detailed and complete feedback can be given.
  • Imagine you could open up a student's essay on your computer screen, press a button and from that moment on everything you said and any corrections you made on the work were all recorded on video. If you highlighted something, underlined a spelling mistake or talked about the organisation of the essay, it would all be recorded.
  • They could then play it back, and listen and watch as you commented on their essay. You could get them to watch the video and then redraft their essay. Moreover, it wouldn't require any fancy software, just standard screen recorder software that works at a click of the mouse.
  • ...14 more annotations...
  • simplicity
  • small amount of extra time involved
  • This makes feedback both oral and visual, and therefore suitable for different learning styles.
  • these ideas are not limited to higher education.
  • distance learning
  • Camtasia
  • The second step was to look at the kind of feedback provided. Is it better to provide direct correction of the mistakes within the videos or simply to highlight mistakes, but get students to correct the work themselves?
  • not to correct the mistakes but rather to point out where they were
    • Teresa Guasch
       
      = to our study (paper: Guasch, Espasa, Alvarez, Kirschner, 2011)
  • next step
  • some comparative studies.
  • This forces students to work with the videos and extract the information provided in them
    • Teresa Guasch
       
      But, what do they exactly do with the feedback received? what do they integrate? How do they revise the document?
  • Are the videos effective learning tools? Do they result in improved drafts against traditional methods and what do students feel about them?
Teresa Guasch

Assessment & Feedback - University of Strathclyde - 2 views

    • Teresa Guasch
       
      Interesting tips for students at the end of the webpage
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