View Cart | My Account | FAQs | Help
This workshop will explore and demonstrate assessment mechanisms that make student learning visible to the professor. By experiencing assessment as a solution rather than as a problem, participants experience for themselves how (a) assessment shifts responsibility from the teacher teaching to the student learning, (b) an assessment-based pedagogy yields useful feedback simultaneously for both professor and student, and (c) implementing this approach, the professor saves time and effort while students learn faster and deeper. Accordingly, everyone goes home happier.
This workshop begins with the posing of a problem --a conundrum-- that has popular appeal and a lot of surrounding myth. As participants ponder various solutions, I will introduce an assessment device that serves to sharpen the problem and draw on participants’ backgrounds. As progress toward a solution occurs, I will invoke another assessment device in order to make learning visible to individual participants as well as to the group as a whole. This process will repeat --invoking assessment tools one after another—in a way that leads toward an overall solution to the problem. The goal of the session, of course, is not to solve the problem but, rather, to engage the participants inside the assessment process, whether they do this privately in front of their own computer or more publicly through on-line interaction. The problem is merely a lever or funnel to move them or lead them in. At the end of the first session, I will provide a deeper problem --a case study-- that they can consider over the following week.
During the second session, we will examine the case and explore more assessment approaches that lead to satisfactory solutions. At the end of the second session, I will point out that I did not actually teach them any answers. Rather, the participant learned new things (because they wanted to) and assembled them themselves in order to solve the problem. The assessment methods made the learning visible so that I was available “when they got stuck.” Accordingly, I spent less time teaching and they spent more time learning. This method works at many levels, including both the on-line and F2F environments.
Objectives
(a) produce improved learning by emphasizing the responsibility of the student,
(b) are simple, low-threshold, turn-key activities that work immediately,
(c) can be done either solo or with one or more trusted colleagues,
(d) save faculty teaching time and effort,
(e) cost little (e.g., a package of 3x5 cards) or nothing,
(f) can be used privately or can contribute to departmental assessment efforts, thereby demonstrating good citizenship,
(g) are suitable for inclusion in professors’ promotion, merit, and tenure portfolios,
(h) generate feedback and “close the loop,” and
(i) send everyone home happier at the end of the day.
Package Deals (for our products costing $345):
3 presentations for $750 - enter coupon code 3ondemand when registering (Save $285)
How does it work?
How will we use these trainings?