these confusing technology times: making decisions about what to assess and evaluate

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These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Indiana University and CourseShare.com http://php.indiana.edu/~cjbonk [email protected]

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These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate. Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Indiana University and CourseShare.com http://php.indiana.edu/~cjbonk [email protected]. Confusion Reigns. How allocate time? When to assess? How to assess? How grade teamwork? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Dr. Curtis J. Bonk Indiana University and CourseShare.com

http://php.indiana.edu/~cjbonk

[email protected]

                                      

    

Page 2: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Confusion Reigns1. How allocate time?2. When to assess?3. How to assess?4. How grade teamwork?5. Whose work is it?

Page 3: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Other Issues?1. …

Page 4: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Student Assessment:

Product Focus

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Traditional Assessment Methods

Most often, students are assessed in one of the following knowledge-focused ways Objective test questions Essay test questions Papers/Reports Projects

All are product-oriented in nature

Page 6: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Most Assessment Tools Focus on tests

Automatic grading/feedback Test pools Timing

Favor objective questions Few tools to facilitate other

forms of assessment File exchange/dropbox

Page 7: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Focus of Assessment?

1. Basic Knowledge, Concepts, Ideas

2. Higher-Order Thinking Skills, Problem Solving, Communication, Teamwork

3. Both of Above!!!4. Other…

Page 8: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Technology Assessments Possible

Online Portfolios of Work Discussion/Forum Participation Online Mentoring Weekly Reflections Tasks Attempted or

Completed, Usage, etc.

Page 9: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Sample Portfolio Scoring Dimensions

(10 pts each)(see: http://php.indiana.edu/~cjbonk/p250syla.htm)

1. Richness2. Coherence3. Elaboration4. Relevancy5. Timeliness6. Completeness7. Persuasivenes

s8. Originality

1. Insightful2. Clear/Logical3. Original4. Learning5. Fdback/

Responsive6. Format7. Thorough8. Reflective9. Overall Holistic

Page 10: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

More Possible Assessments

Quizzes and Tests Peer Feedback and

Responsiveness Cases and Problems Group Work Web Resource Explorations &

Evaluations

Page 11: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

E-Case Analysis Evaluation

Peer Feedback Criteria(1 pt per item; 5 pts/peer feedback)

(a) Provides additional points that may have been missed.

(b) Corrects a concept, asks for clarification where needed, debates issues, disagrees & explains why.

(c) Ties concepts to another situation or refers to the text or coursepack.

(d) Offer valuable insight based on personal experience.

(e) Overall constructive feedback.

Page 12: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Possible Methods of Assessment

Review of online group work spaces Evidence of regular and substantial

contributions Self and peer assessment

Have students rate team members on various dimensions

Have students indicate where work plan was followed/not followed

Student reflection Have students write brief reflections on their

group process, indicating what they might change the next time

Page 13: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

E-Peer Evaluation Form

Peer Evaluation. Name: ____________________Rate on Scale of 1 (low) to 5 (high):

___ 1. Insight: creative, offers analogies/examples, relationships drawn, useful ideas and connections, fosters growth.

___ 2. Helpful/Positive: prompt feedback, encouraging, informative, makes suggestions & advice, finds, shares info.

___ 3. Valuable Team Member: dependable, links group members, there for group, leader, participator, pushes group.

___ Total Rec’d Contribution Pts (out of 15)

Page 14: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Assessment Issues

Page 15: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Issues to Consider…

1. Bonus pts for participation?2. Peer evaluation of work?3. Assess improvement?4. Is it timed? Give unlimited time

to complete? 5. Allow retakes if lose

connection? How many retakes?

Page 16: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Issues to Consider…

6. Cheating? Is it really that student?

7. Authenticity?8. Negotiate tasks and

criteria?9. How measure competency? 10. How do you demonstrate

learning online?

Page 17: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Catching da cheaters!

Page 18: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Increasing Cheating Online

($7-$30/page, http://www.syllabus.com/ January, 2002, Phillip Long, Plagiarism: IT-Enabled Tools for

Deceit?)

http://www.academictermpapers.com/

http://www.termpapers-on-file.com/ http://www.nocheaters.com/ http://www.cheathouse.com/uk/index.html http://www.realpapers.com/ http://www.pinkmonkey.com/ (“you’ll never buy Cliffnotes again”)

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Page 20: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate
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Reducing Cheating Online

Ask yourself, why are they cheating? Do they value the assignment? Are tasks relevant and challenging? What happens to the task after

submitted—reused, woven in, posted?

Due at end of term? Real audience? Look at pedagogy b4 calling

plagiarism police!

Page 22: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Reducing Cheating Online Proctored exams Vary items in exam Make course too hard to cheat Try Plagiarism.com ($300) Use mastery learning for some tasks Random selection of items for item

pool Use test passwords, rely on IP#

screening Assign collaborative tasks

Page 23: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Reducing Cheating Online($7-$30/page, http://www.syllabus.com/ January,

2002, Phillip Long, Plagiarism: IT-Enabled Tools for Deceit?)

http://www.plagiarism.org/ (resource) http://www.turnitin.com/ (software, $100,

free 30 day demo/trial) http://www.canexus.com/ (software; essay

verification engine, $19.95) http://www.plagiserve.com/ (free database

of 70,000 student term papers & cliff notes) http://www.academicintegrity.org/ (assoc.) http://sja.ucdavis.edu/avoid.htm (guide)

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Page 25: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Turnitin Testimonials

"Many of my students believe that if they do not submit their essays, I will not discover their plagiarism. I will often type a paragraph or two of their work in myself if I suspect plagiarism. Every time, there was a "hit." Many students were successful plagiarists in high school. A service like this is needed to teach them that such practices are no longer acceptable and certainly not ethical!”

Page 26: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Online Assessment Concerns Problem: Cheating on tests

Copying from neighbor Copying from course materials Someone else taking the test

Problem: Plagiarism Submitting someone else’s paper (previous

class) Copying from (online) sources Buying paper online

Both are product-oriented concerns

Page 27: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Assessment: Process Focus(Vanessa Dennen, Sept 2002)

Page 28: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Assessing Process

Easy to do Many technology tools will archive student

work/interactions Students create a document trail in process

Helps students develop metacognitive knowledge Instructors structure/model/encourage

productive work processes Students learn how to manage their own

work processes

Page 29: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Why Assess Process?

For the instructor … Provides formative feedback on

course (e.g., helps gather data about why students have difficulty with product-oriented assessments)

Provides sense of instructor guidance Clarifies who is doing most work in

small group assignments Helps prevent cheating

Page 30: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Why Assess Process?

For the student … Typically improves the quality of their

products Helps them develop productive work

processes Puts on a schedule Shows that you care about individual

growth

Page 31: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Assessment Project Cycle From Classroom Assessment

Techniques by Angelo & Cross (1993)

Step 1: Plan Choose class Focus on assessable question Design project to answer question

Page 32: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Assessment Project Cycle [2] Step 2: Implement

Teach target lesson Collect assessment data Analyze data

Step 3: Interpret results Communicate results Evaluate assessment project

Page 33: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

I. Term Papers

How to do online: Have students each start their own

thread and post topic of interest Peers and instructors give feedback Students post thesis statements,

research sources, etc., with iterations of feedback

Final paper is posted

Page 34: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Term Paper Assessments Product: the paper Process: quality and timeliness of

student work from time when paper is assigned

Process: quality and timeliness of feedback provided to peers

Process: responsiveness to feedback received from instructor and peers

Page 35: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

II. Discussion Assignments

1. Chain of thought Have students develop a

solution to a problem Have students indicate what led

them to a particular conclusion, method or approach

Can be done in a discussion board

Page 36: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Discussion Assignments

2. Theory to Practice Have students match up theories you

are learning about to actual problems Present students with problems and

have them explain what theories they would use to solve these problems and how they would approach it

Debrief the assignment

Page 37: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Discussion Assignment

3. Synthesizer Have students take roles being the

weekly synthesizer of class discussion

Add a “meta” level in which students narrate their own experiences while reading the weekly discussion

Page 38: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

III. Group Projects

Tools used Chat: brainstorming ideas, making group

decisions, regular way to feel connected (should be archived)

Discussion board: commenting on drafts E-mail: quick feedback File exchange: sharing project files MS Word: Track changes

HINT: If you don’t have a tool that will work, refer students to yahoo groups: http://www.groups.yahoo.com

Page 39: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Group Project Assessments

Product: project files that are turned in Process: online archive demonstrating

Who contributed what Who provided peer feedback Who worked in a timely manner How collaborative a group was

Process: peer ratings Process: interim instructor consultations

Page 40: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

III. Project Assignments1. Work Plans

Have students develop a plan of work for their project

Make them outline topic, schedule, resources needed, division of labor and anticipated form of final deliverables

At end of project, have students evaluate how well they followed their own plan and how useful it was

Page 41: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Project Assignments

2. Research Trail Have students document the

steps they took in the research process and the results

Ask for a brief reflection on how effective their process was and what they might change the next time

Page 42: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Project Assignments

3. Process Presentations Have students focus on their process

as well as their product in class presentations

To maintain focus, ask them to share 3 main lessons learned

Might ask for some process documents to be shared, like an early draft

Page 43: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Project Assignments

4. Design Journal Have students maintain a journal of

all ideas related to their project Encourage sketches, lists,

organizational charts, etc. Require journals to be turned in with

final projects

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IV. Reflection Assignments

Have students keep a weekly journal of their thoughts on readings and course content AND real-world related instances that they noticed

May make these public, with each student having their own discussion thread

Page 45: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Making it Happen

Learners need to see that process is valuable: Model appropriate processes Provide students with scaffolding (guide

sheets) to structure their processes Give students feedback on their process Require students to reflect on their

processes Grade students on process

Page 46: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Online Testing Tools

Page 47: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Choice: Select companies that

specialize in online assessment.

Page 48: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Or: Use what the courseware package gives ya…

Page 49: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Test Selection Criteria

(Hezel, 1999)

Easy to Configure Items and Test Handle Symbols Scheduling of Feedback (immediate?) Provides feedback for each response Randomize Answers Within a

Question Weighting of Answer Options Supports multiple items types:

multiple choice, true-false, essay, keyword

Page 50: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

More Test Selection Criteria Recording of Multiple

Submissions Comprehensive Statistics Summarize in Portfolio and

Gradebook Confirmation of Test Submission Incorp graphic or audio

elements? Timed Tests

Page 51: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Flexible scoring—score first, last, or average submission

Flexible reporting—by individual or by item and cross tabulations.

Control over number of times students can submit an activity or test

Provides item analysis statistics (e.g., Test Item Frequency Distributions).

More Test Selection Criteria

(Perry & Colon, 2001)

Web Resource: http://www.indiana.edu/~best/

Page 52: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Online Survey Tools for

Assessment

Page 53: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Sample Survey Tools Zoomerang

(http://www.zoomerang.com) SurveyMonkey

(http://www.surveymonkey.com/) QuestionMark

(http://www.questionmark.com/home.html) SurveyShare (http://SurveyShare.com;

from Courseshare.com) Survey Solutions from Perseus

(http://www.perseusdevelopment.com/fromsurv.htm) Infopoll (http://www.infopoll.com)

Page 54: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Web-Based Survey Advantages

Faster collection of data Standardized collection format Computer graphics may reduce

fatigue Computer controlled branching

and skip sections Easy to answer clicking Wider distribution of

respondents

Page 55: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Web-Based Survey Problems: Why Lower

Response Rates?

Low response rate Lack of time Unclear instructions Too lengthy Too many steps Can’t find URL

Page 56: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Survey Tool Features Support different types of items (Likert,

multiple choice, forced ranking, paired comparisons, etc.)

Maintain email lists and email invitations Conduct polls Adaptive branching and cross tabulations Modifiable templates & library of past

surveys Publish reports Different types of accounts—hosted,

corporate, professional, etc.

Page 57: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Web-Based Survey Solutions: Some Tips… Send second request Make URL link prominent Offer incentives near top of request Shorten survey, make attractive,

easy to read Disclose purpose, use, and privacy E-mail cover letters Prenotify of intent to survey

Page 58: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Evaluation…

Page 59: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Champagne & Wisher (in press)

“Simply put, an evaluation is concerned with judging the worth of a program and is essentially conducted to aid in the making of decisions by stakeholders.” (e.g., does it work as effectively as the standard instructional approach).

Page 60: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Evaluation Purposes Cost Savings Improved Efficiency/Effectiveness Learner Performance/Competency

Improvement/Progress What did they learn?

Assessing learning impact How well do learners use what they

learned? How much do learners use what they learn?

Page 61: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Kirkpatrick’s 4 Levels

Reaction Learning Behavior Results

Figure 26. How Respondent Organizations Measure Success of Web-Based Learning According to the

Kirkpatrick Model

0102030405060708090

Learner satisfaction Change inknowledge, skill,

atttitude

Job performance ROI

Kirkpatrick's Evaluation Level

Pe

rcen

t o

f R

esp

on

den

ts

Page 62: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

My Evaluation Plan…

Considerations in Evaluation Plan

1. Student

2. Instructor

3. Training

4. Task5. Tech Tool

6. Course

7. Program

8. University or

Organization

Page 63: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

What to Evaluate?1. Student—attitudes, learning, jobs.

2. Instructor—popularity, course enrollments.

3. Training—internal and external.

4. Task--relevance, interactivity, collaborative.5. Tool--usable, learner-centered, friendly, supportive.

6. Course—interactivity, completion rates.

7. Program—growth, long-range plans.

8. University—cost-benefit, policies, vision.

Page 64: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

1. Measures of Student Success

(Focus groups, interviews, observations, surveys, exams,

records)

Positive Feedback, Recommendations Increased Comprehension, Achievement High Retention in Program Completion Rates or Course Attrition Jobs Obtained, Internships Enrollment Trends for Next Semester

Page 65: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

1. Student Basic Quantitative

Grades, Achievement Number of Posts Participated Computer Log Activity—peak

usage, messages/day, time of task or in system

Attitude Surveys

Page 66: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

1. Student High-End Success

Message complexity, depth, interactivity, q’ing

Collaboration skills Problem finding/solving and critical

thinking Challenging and debating others Case-based reasoning, critical thinking

measures Portfolios, performances, PBL activities

Page 67: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

2. Instructor Success

High student evals; more signing up

High student completion rates Utilize Web to share teaching Course recognized in tenure

decisions Varies online feedback and

assistance techniques

Page 68: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

3. TrainingOutside Support

Training (FacultyTraining.net) Courses & Certificates (JIU, e-education) Reports, Newsletters, & Pubs Aggregators of Info (CourseShare, Merlot) Global Forums (FacultyOnline.com; GEN) Resources, Guides/Tips, Link

Collections, Online Journals, Library Resources

Page 69: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Certified Online Instructor Program

Walden Institute—12 Week Online Certification (Cost = $995)

2 tracks: one for higher ed and one for online corporate trainer Online tools and purpose Instructional design theory

& techniques Distance ed evaluation Quality assurance Collab learning

communities

Page 70: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

http://www.utexas.edu/world/lecture/

Page 71: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate
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3. TrainingInside Support…

Instructional Consulting Mentoring (strategic planning $) Small Pots of Funding Facilities Summer and Year Round Workshops Office of Distributed Learning Colloquiums, Tech Showcases, Guest

Speakers Newsletters, guides, active learning grants,

annual reports, faculty development, brown bags

Page 73: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

Technology and Professional Dev: Ten Tips to Make it Better (Rogers, 2000)

1. Offer training2. Give technology to take home3. Provide on-site technical support4. Encourage collegial collaboration5. Send to prof development

conference6. Stretch the day7. Encourage research8. Provide online resources9. Lunch bytes, faculty institutes10. Celebrate success

Page 74: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

RIDIC5-ULO3US Model of Technology Use

4. Tasks (RIDIC): Relevance Individualization Depth of Discussion Interactivity Collaboration-Control-Choice-

Constructivistic-Community

Page 75: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

RIDIC5-ULO3US Model of Technology Use

5. Tech Tools (ULOUS): Utility/Usable Learner-Centeredness Opportunities with Outsiders

Online Ultra Friendly Supportive

Page 76: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

6. Course Success Few technological glitches/bugs Adequate online support Increasing enrollment trends Course quality (interactivity

rating) Monies paid Accepted by other programs

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7. Program Considerations

Enrollment trends Relevant and current technology Number of Graduates and

graduation rates Sense of community Format: Self-paced,

collaborative, PBL, mentored, performance-based, individual, etc.

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How are costs calculated in online programs???

Page 79: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

7. Online Program or Course Budget (i.e., how pay, how large is course, tech fees charged, # of courses, tuition rate, etc.)

Indirect Costs: learner disk space, phone, accreditation, integration with existing technology, library resources, on site orientation & tech training, faculty training, office space

Direct Costs: courseware, instructor, help desk, books, seat time, bandwidth and data communications, server, server back-up, course developers, postage

Page 80: These Confusing Technology Times: Making Decisions About What to Assess and Evaluate

8. Institutional Success

E-Enrollments from new students, alumni, existing

students Press, publication, partners,

attention Additional grants Making Money: Cost-Benefit model Faculty and student attitudes Acceptable policies (ADA

compliant)

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Final advice…whatever you do…