Continuing my intentional path to explore what I can learn to become a better teacher in a remote synchronous online learning environment, here's part 3. I am participating in a Faculty Learning Community (FLC) sponsored by the Division of Online and Strategic Learning of Ball State University. I will periodically post my reflections in this blog to document my progress, and to serve as a resource for a future me, as I come back to review these posts. Perhaps there will be something of use for other readers that aren't me.
Module 3: Assessment
This module focused on formative and summative assessment. The following notes summarize what I gleaned from the module.
Formative assessment...
- Remote learning means there is more student autonomy
- Distance learning relies on the formative assessment process for success
- The formative assessment process has four attributes:
- Clarify: determine what students will learn and how they will know they have learned it;
- Elicit: generate evidence of student learning, such as asking questions;
- Interpret: review evidence to determine students’ progress towards the learning goal(s);
- Act: take instructional next steps to move students from where they are to where they need to be, such as re-teaching using a different mode.
- Know your purpose
- Focus on feedback
- Peer feedback: Be kind; be specific; be helpful
- Leverage personal conversations
- Check in on SEL (social emotional learning)
Summative assessment...
From Alternative to Exams for Remote Teaching- Online discussions
- Student created videos
- Group projects
- Peer review
- Blogs
- Creative projects
- What is “need to know” versus “nice to know”?
- Which standards are priorities?
- Move from one big assessment to a series of smaller ones
Summary
Overall,
this was another reassuring module for me, in that it focused on a lot of things I am
already doing, although I may not have known the names by which I should call them. I have not felt the need to make any significant adjustments to how I am assessing the learners in courses I am teaching in a remote synchronous modality, since I appear to already be doing the right things.
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