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Assignment, Project, Case Studies

Assignment, Project, Case Studies. Dr. Muhammad Imran Yousuf. What we are going to Discuss Outline. HEC Guide lines Purposes of Assignment & alternate assessment tools Phases Support & Demands Evaluation decisions Developing check lists & rubric SOLO Model. 2. HEC Guidelines.

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Assignment, Project, Case Studies

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  1. Assignment, Project, Case Studies Dr. Muhammad Imran Yousuf

  2. What we are going to DiscussOutline HEC Guide lines Purposes of Assignment & alternate assessment tools Phases Support & Demands Evaluation decisions Developing check lists & rubric SOLO Model 2

  3. HEC Guidelines • In each semester, students may be required to appear in quizzes, mid terms, final examination, give presentation, participate in group discussion, and submit projects/ assignments / lab reports.

  4. HEC Guidelines: Weightage

  5. Purposes of Assignment and other alternative tools • To meet the limitations of normal assessment tools • Scholarly approach

  6. Phases • Planning • Implementation • Evaluation • Feedback

  7. When planning decide how it can: • Fit with main learning objectives • Relate to previous work done • Be new and different • Benefit to students, peers, community, professionals, etc

  8. When planning decide how it can: • Use current topics and current resources • Be completed – in groups, pairs, or individually • Build on students’ previous experience and current skill set

  9. Decide the support & demands students may have: • Identify types of assistance students will require • Contact liaison librarian, community professionals, or other people who can assist you and your students in completing the assignment

  10. Decide the support demands students may have: • When possible, use class time for activities to help students complete the assignment • Decide if students are required to meet with you set times and policies for availability

  11. make evaluation decisions by choosing the: • Assignment length limitations and due dates • Type of feedback to give – written, oral, anonymous • Type of grade required (e.g., check mark, pass/fail, numeric grade)

  12. make evaluation decisions by choosing the: • Parts to evaluate – effort, research process, thinking process, progress, sequence of assignments, drafts, final products • Weighting of components – how much is each part worth

  13. make evaluation decisions by choosing the: • Policies for possible problems – late or incomplete assignments, missed meetings, poor group work practices, plagiarism

  14. Developing Check Lista) (Convey students about stages) • Develop your topic • Identify your audience • Research • Organize and pre-write • Draft/write • Revise • Proofread etc

  15. Rubric Matrix (Levels of learning outcomes)

  16. SOLO (Structure of the Observed Learning Outcomes) Model PrestructuralThe task is engaged, but the learner is distracted or misled by an irrelevant aspect UnistructuralThe learner focuses on the relevant domain, and picks one aspect to work with Multistructural The learner picks up more and more relevant or correct features, but does not integrate them

  17. SOLO (Structure of the Observed Learning Outcomes) Model RelationalThe learner now integrates the parts with each other, so that the whole has a coherent structure and meaning Extended Abstract The learner now integrates, so that the coherent whole is raised to a higher level of performance showing expertise within and of itself.

  18. SOLO Model

  19. SOLO Model • At Extended Abstract Level, student is making connections not only within the given area, but also beyond it, able to generalize and transfer the principles and ideas underlying the specific instance.

  20. Developing evaluation criteria

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