194x Filetype PPTX File size 0.08 MB Source: twu.edu
The Situation Suppose you are teaching research design skills and want to assess them. You could have each student design a research project, but in large science classes the resulting grading load could be severe. You could have them design in teams, cutting down on the number of projects, but then it’s no longer possible to evaluate the skills of an individual on that team. You could have students evaluate an existing research design, and then assess their skills based on what they say in the evaluation. Unfortunately, if the research methods were professionally developed, students may not be skilled enough to critique them. But you could have them evaluate research designs created by other students... Overview The basic idea behind this Assignment is that students work in teams to develop (rapidly, and in-class) a research plan or methods statement for how they might address a research question that you have posed. Then, writing singly, each student evaluates another team’s drafted design, focusing on criteria that you have selected. We recommend assigning the evaluations so that each student within a group evaluates a different team’s project. Those evaluations are submitted as Artifacts for assessment. When the students return to class, you can then have students assemble into new groups based on which designs they reviewed. (Example: Everyone who evaluated Team 1’s design gathers to compare notes. This is henceforth referred to as the “review group.”) The review group reaches a consensus about what its target design team should do differently. The best review team should also have a chance at extra credit. The design teams then reassemble to review their feedback. They may revise based on what they read. Grading the Assignment The Assignment described on the previous page is designed to spare the faculty from a lot of grading. Though it does consume class-time as a trade-off, the time spent is likely to be pedagogically worthwhile, as long as your goal is to teach research design skills. How the sequence is graded: The design group stage: As credit/no-credit participation in an in-class activity. The individual evaluation stage: Completed individual evaluations are required to participate in the review groups and recorded (credit/no-credit) as homework. The review team stage: As participation in an in-class activity. The team that writes the best review earns a small amount of extra credit. The (optional) revision stage: The team with the best research design earns a small amount of extra credit. By discussing your reasons for picking one project over the others, you “close the loop” on the sequence. Building the Assignment The slides that follow describe, in steps, how to build such an assignment. Step 1: Find Your Criteria
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