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Evaluation Methods and Findings of the Field-tested Learning Assessment Guide

Evaluation Methods and Findings of the Field-tested Learning Assessment Guide. Sue Daffinrud Olga Lucia Herrera. The Motivation for the FLAG. Motivated by needs of faculty who wanted centralized place to learn about already-verified assessment techniques and tools (Third Annual NISE Forum)

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Evaluation Methods and Findings of the Field-tested Learning Assessment Guide

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  1. Evaluation Methods and Findings of the Field-tested Learning Assessment Guide Sue Daffinrud Olga Lucia Herrera

  2. The Motivation for the FLAG • Motivated by needs of faculty who wanted centralized place to learn about already-verified assessment techniques and tools (Third Annual NISE Forum) • Does the FLAG satisfy part of this need?

  3. FLAG Structure • Five major sections • Getting Started • Matching Goals to CATs • CATs • Searchable Tools • Resources

  4. FLAG target audience • Instructors who: • teach freshman and sophomore-level science, math, and engineering courses and • are interested in learning about new approaches to assessment

  5. FLAG Evaluation • Does the FLAG website fulfill some of the assessment needs of its target audience? • Formative and Summative Evaluation

  6. Identifying target audience sample • Selected subset of SME disciplines • Biology, chemistry, engineering, mathematics, and physics • Selected range of institutions • By Carnegie classification • Associate of Arts, Baccalaureate, Masters, Doctoral, and Research • Region of country

  7. Identifying target audience sample • Selected faculty through their participation in some initiative which has student learning as its focus. • bioQUEST, Worskhop Biology, OCEPT • Chemistry Coalitions • Engineering Coalitions, EESP • Project NExT • Workshop Physics

  8. 50 faculty who have demonstrated an interest in “learning, not teaching”

  9. Contacting participants • Called and emailed faculty requesting their participation • Participation involved: • Browsing through FLAG for 30 minutes • Providing feedback in a 30 minute interview • High participation rate

  10. Interviews • Participants were asked about: • Their current teaching practice • How they learn about new assessment/teaching techniques • Impressions of FLAG, both specific and general • Whether would recommend FLAG to others

  11. Data Gathering Status • Have interviewed 32 faculty • Will interview the remaining 18 in December

  12. Preliminary findings • Demographics of respondents • Technical issues • Themes of Use and Need • Dissemination

  13. Demographics • Range of teaching experience (2-22 yrs) • Critical of the value of lecture • Goals: improving students’ interest in science • Role: facilitator for their learning • Info on assessment gained through conversations with fellow faculty, conferences in their discipline • Few “surf” the web

  14. Technical Issues – Navigation patterns • Participants spent between 30 minutes to 4 hours in the FLAG, most about an hour. • Many moved “left to right”

  15. Technical Issues • Almost all found the web site • Easy to read • Structured well • Could find what they needed • Enjoyed being able to download documents • Suggestions • Provide more obvious description of site structure • Provide better navigation instructions

  16. Themes of Use/Need - Overall • Overall response: Positive • Almost all respondents had already or had plans to recommend the site to other faculty, faculty developers, or other groups

  17. Themes of Use/Need - Sections • Has teaching component • Matching Goals to CATs • Primer • Availability of links to other web sites • Annotated bibliography • References • “Empty” sections create expectation • Searchable tools • “Experts” by state

  18. Themes of Use/Need - CATs • Time is a factor in browsing and in applicability • First page of CATs (why, how, what’s involved) • People selected: • CATs which were familiar to them • CATs which best fit their goals and time

  19. Themes of Use/Need – CATs (cont) • People want a complete picture • Like the case study approach • When and how to use the CAT • What to do with the information • How to get students “on board” • Clear and useful examples • People want “tools” from their discipline to varying degrees

  20. Dissemination of FLAG • Evaluation AS dissemination • Hope to find out how best to reach people like our sample • Discipline-specific professional meetings • Workshops • People on campus who do assessment • Email to appropriate email lists

  21. Final Notes • Submitted abstract for presentation at AAHE 2000 • Write monograph or paper • Provide more formative information • to Tony • To ILT group as they develop site

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