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Assessing Your Assessments:

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Title: Assessing Your Assessments:


1
Assessing Your Assessments The Authentic
Assessment Challenge
Dr. Diane King Director, Curriculum
Development School of Computer Engineering
Technologies dking1_at_mdc.edu March 13, 2009
2
SESSION OBJECTIVES
  • How to identify and define learning outcomes
  • How to align assessment with learning outcomes
  • How to assess learning outcomes

3
  • What is assessment?
  • Why do we assess?
  • What do we assess?
  • Is it working?

4
What is Assessment?
  • Assessment is the systematic gathering and
    analyzing of information (excluding course
    grades) to inform and improve student learning or
    programs of student learning in light of
    goal-oriented expectations
  • Effective Grading A Tool for Learning and
    Assessment Barbara Walvoord and Virginia Johnson
    Anderson Jossey-Bass, 1998

5
What is Assessment?
  • Techniques used to analyze student
    accomplishment against specific goals and
    criteria
  • UW-Madison Assessment Manual

6
Authentic Assessment
  • simulate or replicate important real-world
    challenges (Wiggins and McTighe)
  • measures a students ability to perform a real
    world task (Northern Illinois University)

7
Authentic Assessment
  • A form of assessment in which students are asked
    to perform real-world tasks that demonstrate
    meaningful application of essential knowledge and
    skills. 
  • Student performance on a task is typically scored
    on a rubric to determine how successfully the
    student has met specific standards. (Mueller)

8
Why Do We Assess?
  • To know if students can apply what they have
    learned in authentic situations
  • (Mueller)

9
Why Do We Assess?
  • To Improve
  • To Inform
  • To Prove
  • UW-Madison Assessment Manual Using Assessment
    for Academic Program Improvement April 2000
  • Program Improvement Revised April 2000 

10
What Do We Assess?
  • How do we know what to assess?

11
Where To Start?
  • At the END!!!
  • with the OUTCOME!!!!

12
Outcome
  • Specific accomplishments to be achieved
  • (Hatfield)

13
LEARNING OUTCOME
  • What do I want my students to KNOW as a result of
    taking this course?
  • KNOWLEDGE
  • What do I want my students to be able to DO as a
    result of taking this course?
  • SKILLS

14
Learning Outcome
  • HOW are my students going to APPLY what they have
    learned in here, out there?
  • PERFORMANCE

15
Learning Outcomes
  • As a result of this program/course, students
    will be able to.
  • College wide
  • Discipline specific
  • Program level
  • Course level

16
Institutional Outcomes
17
Backward Design
  • 1. Identify desired results
  • 2. Determine acceptable evidence
  • 3. Plan learning experiences and instruction
  • Wiggins and McTighe

18
Desired Result
  • Participants will identify one key learning
    outcome for a course they teach
  • Participants will design one authentic assessment
    activity to measure

19
Performance Task
  • Real world application of knowledge or skill

20
Measurable Performance
  • What criteria will you use to measure how the
    student performed the task?

21
Rubric
  • A scoring scale used to assess student
    performance along a task-specific set of criteria
    Mueller

22
Rubric
23
Types of Assessment Methods
  • Portfolio - Digital/electronic/web-based
  • Special projects/capstones
  • Journals/learning logs/digital learning records
  • Conferences/interviews
  • Oral examinations
  • Self-/peer assessments
  • Collaborative project
  • Performances
  • Experiments/research studies/visual
    representations
  • Case studies
  • Service learning
  • Internships logs/journals/reflections

24
Types of Assessment Methods
  • Education plan
  • Faculty critiques
  • Documentation of service learning experiences
  • Anecdotal observations
  • Student generated items
  • Industry certifications that show competencies
  • Conferences/interviews

25
Direct Assessment
  • Comprehensive Exam
  • Major Project
  • Student Portfolios
  • Pre-test/Post-test
  • Embedded questions
  • Performance assessment
  • Senior Portfolio
  • Embedded questions in exams
  • Senior seminar

26
INDIRECT ASSESSMENT
  • Internship Evaluation
  • Alumni, Employer, Graduate Exit survey
  • Student scholarly achievement
  • Examination of information contained in
    department's own database
  • Student Satisfaction Survey
  • Student Course Evaluation
  • Community perception of program
  • Student graduation/retention rate
  • Focus group discussions

27
Classroom Assessment Techniques
Informal/Immediate Feedback
  • The One-Minute PaperThe minute paper is a short
    exercise in which you ask students to write for
    one minute on two questions What was the most
    important thing you learned today? and, what
    question still remains in your mind after today's
    class?
  • The Muddiest PointThis assessment method is
    similar to the minute paper. Students write a
    one-minute essay on the muddiest point that
    remains in their minds after a lecture,
    demonstration, or presentation.
  • The One-Sentence SummaryIn this method, students
    write and then discuss a one-sentence summary
    that describes the content covered in class.
  • Directed ParaphrasingIn directed paraphrasing,
    students summarize a concept or procedure in two
    or three sentences.
  • Applications CardsHere, the instructor asks
    students to think of real-world applications of
    topics discussed in class.

28
Is It Working?
29
Assessing the Assessment
30
ASSESSMENT VALIDATION
  • 1. Are the following elements present in the
    instrument?
  • Learning Outcome
  • Product or performance-based assessment
  • Real-world relevance
  • Application of knowledge
  • Alignment with criteria on rubric

31
ASSESSMENT VALIDATION
  •  
  • 2. Will the assessment task elicit the learning
    outcome(s) being assessed?
  •  3. Will the assessment task elicit a full
    expression of ability at a level appropriate to
    the students general education learning
    experience?
  •  4. Does the assessment task require students to
    demonstrate proficiency of the learning outcome
    (understanding and ability)?
  •  

32
ASSESSMENT VALIDATION
  • 5. Does the assessment task integrate knowledge
    and skills gained throughout the students
    general education learning experience?
  • 6. Does the assessment task permit students some
    individual difference in meeting the performance
    criteria?
  •  7. On a scale (from disconnected to fully
    integrated), does the assessment task encourage
    students to integrate competencies with each
    other?

33
ASSESSMENT VALIDATION
  • 8. Does the assessment task assess both
    knowledge and ability?
  •  9. Is the assessment task authentic that is,
    does it involve students in issues they see as
    vital concerns or engage them with problems
    related to the real world?
  • 10. Will the assessment task produce results that
    can provide diagnostic, structured feedback on
    students attainment of the targeted learning
    outcome?
  •  

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Workshop Applied Learning Tasks Introduction to
Computers/Computer Literacy
  • 1. Identify One Learning Outcome
  • 2. Develop one authentic assessment task to
    measure that outcome

39
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40
THANK YOU!
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