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Assessment Strategies-The evidence! - 1 views

started by Rati Jani on 21 Jul 15 no follow-up yet
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Course Assessment Practices and Student Learning Strategies in Online Courses - 0 views

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    The theoretical difference between formative and summative assessment strategies is explored in this paper as well as the fact that on-line assessment is a new field of study with very little written about it.
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Assessment Strategies for Online Learning - 0 views

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    A series of 15 slides that concisely delineate assessment strategies for online courses.
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Assessing Online Learning: Strategies, Challenges and Opportunities - 0 views

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    This is a special report that features 12 articles from "Online Classroom" that offers some insight into how to assess online learning at the course, program, and institutional levels.
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Align Assessments, Objectives, Instructional Strategies - Teaching Excellence & Educati... - 0 views

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    Assessments should reveal how well students have learned what we want them to learn while instruction ensures that they learn it. For this to occur, assessments, learning objectives, and instructional strategies need to be closely aligned so that they reinforce one another.
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How 'Good' is Your Online Course? Five Steps to Assess Course Quality - 0 views

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    I think it is an interesting article about assessment. Some points are the same as what Leah mentioned.
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Promoting Student Self-Assessment - ReadWriteThink - 0 views

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    Although the target readership is grade 6-12 instructors, I find the methodology in this article applicable to what we are trying to do. Give it a read and see what you think.
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The Flipped Classroom: A Course Redesign to Foster Learning... : Academic Medicine - 1 views

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    McLaughlin, Jacqueline E. PhD, MS; Roth, Mary T. PharmD, MHS; Glatt, Dylan M.; Gharkholonarehe, Nastaran PharmD; Davidson, Christopher A. ME; Griffin, LaToya M. PhD; Esserman, Denise A. PhD; Mumper, Russell J. PhD In recent years, colleges and universities in the United States have faced considerable scrutiny for their apparent failure to adequately educate students.
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    I read this article and found it to be enormously interesting and enlightening. The course coordinator was a seasoned veteran; there were numerous resources dedicated to this venture (full time graduate TAs, dedicated IT personnel) and yet the authors report that the coordinator still required 127% more time to prepare the online components of this course. I also noticed that many of the active learning strategies discussed (think-pair-share, as an example) are things that could easily be incorporated into a non-flipped classroom.
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    One idea came to mind as I read the article about offloading lecture material for students so that synchronous class time can be used for discussion and problem solving: the use of case studies. Public health, business, and development work often relies on group engagement in response to case studies. The background could be presented, along with vital tools for assessing and analyzing the situation, then on-line classes could be used for rich discussion of the range of solutions and opportunities. I'm thinking of a model of a traditional pilgrimage in which pilgrims keep coming together in larger numbers the closer they get to their destination.
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