Soft Skills Systems / Teaching / Assessment - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 43
About This Presentation
Title:

Soft Skills Systems / Teaching / Assessment

Description:

Licence: PDL http://www.openoffice.org/licenses/PDL.html 'I confirm that I am the sole author of this template or graphic. This work is created from my own ideas and ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:525
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 44
Provided by: stae151
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Soft Skills Systems / Teaching / Assessment


1
Soft SkillsSystems / Teaching / Assessment
  • Kostas Kechagias

Presentation in 2nd MASS meeting Work Package 4,
Needs Analysis / Piloting
June 2010
2
Contents
  • Skills and Skills Frameworks
  • Teaching Skills and Competences
  • Skills Assessment
  • Experimental Methodology
  • Conclusions/Homework

3
Skills and Skills Frameworks (1/13)
  • towards definitions (DeSeCo)
  • great interest for identification of common
    skills
  • must be connected to success in life
  • the definition should address how they are used
  • Definition skills or abilities individuals need
    in order to achieve success in life, within the
    context of their socio-cultural milieu, through
    adaptation to, shaping of, and selection of
    environments
  • Often they are used interchangeably or in a vague
    sense

4
Skills and Skills Frameworks (2/13)
  • a proliferation of efforts to develop lists of
    skills, knowledge, and competencies necessary for
    success in the workplace and society
  • basic skills are not sufficient for success in
    the workplace
  • employability skills
  • enabling skills, generic skills, core
    skills, key competencies, essential skills,
    and necessary skills.
  • methodology start from a broad definition and
    then survey or observes workers, supervisors, and
    experts to determine what skills are common

5
Skills and Skills Frameworks (3/13)
  • SCANS
  • 1991, US president and Education Secretary,
    America 2000
  • seven skill groups
  • Influence Organizational Effectiveness and
    leadership
  • Group effectiveness Interpersonal skills,
    negotiation and teamwork
  • Personal management Self-esteem, goal
    setting/motivation, and personal and career
    development
  • Adaptability Creative thinking and problem
    solving
  • Communication Listening and oral communication
  • Competence Reading, writing and computation
  • The foundation Learning to learn.

6
Skills and Skills Frameworks (4/13)
  • Michigan
  • Center for Career and Technical Education,
    Michigan State University
  • human relations skills
  • Positive work attitude,
  • Teamwork
  • Listening
  • Honesty and Idengrity
  • Demonstrate initiative
  • Handling pressure tension
  • Communication
  • conceptual skills
  • technical skills

7
Skills and Skills Frameworks (5/13)
  • Scottish Qualifications Authority, 2008
  • Problem Solving
  • Communication
  • Numeracy
  • Information and Communication Technology
  • Working with Others
  • Component Working Co-operatively with Others
  • identifying, with support, your own role and the
    roles of other people, and helping to achieve a
    shared goal
  • to
  • analyzing the roles and behavior of others and
    adapting your own behavior to deal with the
    complexity of changing and challenging dynamics

8
Skills and Skills Frameworks (6/13)
  • DeSeCo (Definition and Selection of Competencies)
  • OECD, 1997
  • A competency is more than just knowledge and
    skills. It involves the ability to meet complex
    demands, by drawing on and mobilising
    psychosocial resources (including skills and
    attitudes) in a particular context.

9
Skills and Skills Frameworks (7/13)
  • Using Tools Interactively
  • use language, symbols and text interactively
  • use knowledge and information interactively
  • use technology interactively
  • Interacting in Heterogeneous Groups
  • relate well to others
  • cooperate
  • manage and resolve conflicts
  • Acting Autonomously
  • act within the big picture
  • form and conduct life plans and personal projects
  • assert rights, interests, limits and needs

10
Skills and Skills Frameworks (8/13)
  • ALL (Adult Literacy and Life skills survey
    project)
  • OECD, 2005
  • employability skills derived from job and task
    analysis and psychological theories of
    intelligence
  • scientifically convincing theory and an
    established literature
  • accompanying tradition of measurement
  • could be learnt and, therefore, taught
  • had a direct impact on the social, health,
    educational or economic life chances of
    individuals

11
Skills and Skills Frameworks (9/13)
  • European Qualification Framework
  • Education and Training 2010 (2004)
  • communication in the mother tongue
  • communication in foreign languages
  • mathematical competence and basic competences in
    science and technology
  • digital competence
  • learning to learn
  • social and civic competences
  • sense of initiative and entrepreneurship
  • cultural awareness and expression

12
Skills and Skills Frameworks (10/13)
  • MASS Framework
  • we dont have much information

Manners
Ownership of tasks
Attendance
Motivation
Professionalism
Work output
Conduct in workplace
Timekeeping
Verbal Communication
Organisation/ planning
Team-working/ Respect
Helping others
Conscientiousness
Ability to ask for help
Adaptability/ Flexibility
  • dont seem to fit in any studied framework

13
Skills and Skills Frameworks (11/13)
  • No grouping of skills is provided
  • Some skills may be fit in more than one
    categories in other skill frameworks, e.g.
  • Motivation
  • Taking on new challenges, working hard to achieve
    goals, thinking of new ways to do things
  • Under SCANS contains elements from categories
  • Personal Qualities (taking on new challenges)
  • Thinking Skills (thinking of new ways to do
    things)
  • Seems to be closely related to Proffesionalism
  • Working to a high standard, being consistent in
    attitude (not allowing emotions or personalities
    to influence you)

14
Skills and Skills Frameworks (12/13)
  • Most frameworks are concerning higher education
    graduates
  • One may argue that the target group is different,
    so the skills to be considered are different
  • however, this should be established in the
    grounds of empirical research of literature
  • The skills should be defined in such a way as to
    minimize overlap
  • Failure to do so may have impact to teaching, but
    mainly to assessment.

15
Skills and Skills Frameworks (13/13)
  • Questions
  • What is the framework on which the MASS skills
    are based?
  • What justifies the selection of the particular
    skills as the most important ones?
  • If there is not a given one, referred from the
    literature, what are the empirical studies that
    support the selection?
  • Are the skills chosen in such a way as the
    interdependencies are minimized?
  • Is the selection justified from the view point of
    the assessment?

16
Teaching Skills and Competences (1/9)
  • Gonczi, 2003 (DeSeCo)
  • The best examples active independent learning,
    especially in ways that simulated contexts they
    might experience in later life
  • those that integrated the key competencies into
    the teaching of other material, rather than
    attempting to teach them as stand-alone entities
  • seemed to be more success in student outcomes
    when the key competencies were made explicit
  • in many instances, it was not possible to
    separate out the key competencies in the process
    of teaching and learning.
  • very few of the projects in vocational education
    specifically assessed the acquisition of key
    competencies directly. The most comprehensive
    attempt to assess them was via a portfolio of
    evidence which students collected for themselves.

17
Teaching Skills and Competences (2/9)
  • Welsh Canning, 2003 (SQA)
  • The prospect of the isolation of Core Skills, as
    a separately taught and assessed subject, would
    appear to be unpopular with candidates. From the
    literature, it can be seen that this is also
    unpopular with employers.
  • Completely separate delivery and assessment often
    not popular with candidates as its tantamount
    to a return to school

18
Teaching Skills and Competences (3/9)
  • Shuman, et. all., 2005 (ABET)
  • The choice of team task depends on the
    educational objectives
  • if the objective is to have students experience a
    specific aspect of teaming such as brainstorming,
    specific group exercises new ideas can be used
  • if the objective is for students to experience a
    broad range of team processes and behaviors, then
    more complex activities are suitable

19
Teaching Skills and Competences (4/9)
  • Shuman, et. all., 2005 (ABET)
  • Two guiding principles should be followed in
    choosing activities fidelity and complexity
  • Fidelity similarity of the training situation to
    the students present and future working
    conditions.
  • The higher the fidelity, the more superior the
    transfer of learning to the workplace
  • Complexity is defined by two subfactors task
    interdependence and cognitive effort. The more
    complex the activity, the more team skills are
    required by the participant.

20
Teaching Skills and Competences (5/9)
  • Shuman, et. all., 2005 (ABET)
  • advantages and disadvantages
  • fidelity/high complexity activities
  • most resemble real workplace conditions,
  • typically are more difficult for the instructor
    to manage,
  • resource intensive,
  • time consuming for the student.
  • lower in fidelity/ low complexity activities
  • typically more structured and easier to
    administer,
  • may be perceived as less relevant by the student,
  • the experience having less of a learning impact.
    Finally,
  • may not challenge the team nor provide the
    environment necessary for intense interaction
    among team members

21
Teaching Skills and Competences (6/9)
  • Teaching methods (Szul, 2002)
  • Coaching
  • Project Work (e.g. Newsletter)
  • Portfolio
  • Job-shadowing experiences
  • Videotapes/Observations
  • Interviews
  • Case studies
  • Role playing

22
Teaching Skills and Competences (7/9)
  • MASS Teaching
  • seems to be standalone course
  • justification needed
  • Interdisciplinary
  • 18 weeks of approximately 4 hours/week
  • partners should be consulted for the feasibility

23
Teaching Skills and Competences (8/9)
  • The activities that the 1st learning byte
    contains belong to the following categories
  • Presentation 4 times
  • Group discussion 2 times
  • Directed Discussion (Class Discussion) 6 times
  • Quiz 2 times
  • Observation 1 time
  • Individual work 1 time
  • Personal discussion with the teacher 1 time
  • Mainly teacher centered designed
  • Hopefully, your grades will be improved

24
Teaching Skills and Competences (9/9)
  • the design of the lessons seems a lot like the
    designs of the vocational training
  • Question about their efficiency
  • Excellent quality of materials, within the
    concept
  • instruction based not project based
  • question whether we train on the knowledge of
    soft skills rather than soft skills themselves
  • In some places, as in formation of student
    groups, more elaboration is needed

25
Assessment (1/14)
  • indicators and outcomes
  • indicators are the means by which we can measure
    whether the outcomes have been achieved
  • achievements which may indicate acquisition or
    progress towards an outcome
  • Not all indicators will be suitable for all
    target groups, and some will be target group
    specific.

26
Assessment (2/14)
  • Methods for collection of information on soft
    outcomes
  • Individual action planning, personal action
    planning and goal setting
  • Reviews between trainers/assessors and clients to
    record soft outcomes
  • Daily diary or personal journal
  • In-depth reflection during or after the course
  • Recorded observations of group or individual
    activities
  • Presentation of material in a portfolio
  • Tests

27
Assessment (3/14)
  • requirements from the tools
  • reliability
  • Validity
  • Requirements from the definitions
  • two ends
  • so general that it becomes totally abstract and
    refers more to a system of values than to
    abilities
  • less comprehensive in ones ambitions and is
    content with assessing a few specific
    competencies in a necessarily limited context the

28
Assessment (4/14)
  • Competencies do not exist in themselves they can
    only be demonstrated when an individual is acting
    in a specific context.
  • pieces of research have shown that the subjects
    performance is largely dependent on the contents
    of the task, on any previous training the subject
    may have had, on the type of strategy resorted
    to, and on the formal characteristics of the task
  • the same tasks undertaken in different
    situationssuch as work situations or job
    interview situationscan yield very different
    results

29
Assessment (5/14)
  • Teamwork (Baker, et al., 2005) (ALL Framework)
  • Focus towards identifying the specific competency
    requirements of team members
  • competencies a cluster of related knowledge,
    skills, and attitudes that affects a major part
    of ones job
  • is correlated with performance on the job
  • can be measured against well-accepted standards
  • can be improved through training and development.

30
Assessment (6/14)
  • three types of competencies that are central for
    effective teamwork Cannon-Bowers et al. (1995)
  • team knowledge competencies,
  • the principles and concepts that underlie a
    teams effective task performance
  • team skill competencies,
  • learned capacity to interact with other team
    members at some minimal proficiency level
  • adaptability, situation awareness, performance
    monitoring/feedback, leadership, interpersonal
    relations, coordination, communication, and
    decision making
  • team attitude competencies
  • an internal state that influences a team members
    choices or decisions to act in a particular way
  • Positive attitudes toward teamwork and mutual
    trust among team members

31
Assessment (7/14)
  • ALL questionnaire for teamwork
  • Evaluation of teamwork requires observation
  • Target group International, adults
  • Examines
  • knowledge about team skills,
  • attitudes toward teamwork
  • historical experience with teamwork

32
Assessment (8/14)
33
Assessment (9/14)
  • Zhuang, et. all., Roberts, 2008 (ETS)
  • Questionnaire
  • target at high school students (mean age 16.10)
    undertaking Ford PASS courses
  • consists of reliable and qualitatively distinct
    factors
  • involves a variety of methods
  • has demonstrable validity evidence

34
Assessment (10/14)
  • Contains
  • Self-report ratings (57 items)
  • cooperation with others (15 items),
  • advocate and influence (12 items),
  • resolve
  • conflict/negotiate (17 items),
  • guiding others (13 items).
  • Situational judgment tests (SJTs)
  • eight scenarios describing various situations and
    required participants to evaluate the
    effectiveness of four reactions to each situation
  • Teacher ratings

35
Assessment (11/14)
  • MASS assessment
  • one might form the impression of an underlying
    assumption that each skill, can be assessed
    separately
  • Is it possible? Interrelated skills?
  • Some skills, as motivation is difficult to
    assess outside a particular framework
  • Need for clarification of definitions?
  • Development of indicators?
  • Framework?

36
Assessment (12/14)
  • the main assessment tool proposed is as self
    reference questionnaire
  • students mark their grades against each skill,
    every week
  • They can see the grades they put to themselves in
    the previous weeks
  • aim being that your scores will have improved -
    biased toward to a false improvement of grades?
  • What about the students that they do not (or they
    thing they do not) improve? motivation for more
    or drop out?

37
Assessment (13/14)
  • three entities involved in the course, the
    students, the teacher(s) and the materials
  • Student self evaluation
  • Student evaluation from the students (peer
    evaluation)
  • Student evaluation from the teacher(s)
  • Teacher self evaluation
  • Teacher evaluation from the students
  • Material and course quality evaluation from the
    students
  • Material and course quality evaluation from the
    teachers.

38
Assessment (14/14)
  • questionnaires are convenient, but others, like
    portfolio or in depth interviews may be
    considered
  • the partners should decide about the aims and the
    methodology of the evaluation
  • If we decide to confine ourselves in a given
    framework, the uses of readymade and tested tools
    are also possible
  • other aspects of influence
  • self-esteem and self-image

39
Experimental Methodology (1/1)
  • The proposed methodology is the classical
    experimental one
  • Two groups, the experimental and the control one
  • Initial Assessment
  • Intervention
  • Final Assessment
  • What about long term results?

40
Conclusions/Homework (1/3)
  • Does MASS framework needs clarification and
    justification?
  • Is the proposed schedule 18 weeks X 4 hours
    suitable for the partners?
  • Each partner should report on this
  • Suggest modifications
  • Two alternatives
  • All the same schedule Comparable results
  • Different schedules Test more than one
    variations of program to see which works best.

41
Conclusions/Homework (2/3)
  • Teaching organization
  • How many students
  • How many classes
  • What age
  • What educational background
  • Suggested period of teaching
  • what else?
  • Decision about assessment
  • Target of assessment
  • Ages of students
  • Assessment procedure questionnaires only or
    something more?
  • Each partner studies and comments proposed
    questionnaires and maybe contributes with more
  • what else?

42
Conclusions/Homework (3/3)
  • Deadline?
  • What about end of June?

43
  • Thanks for your patience!!!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com