On 3/5/19 2:26 pm, Karl Auer wrote:
... I have a big problem with every damn tiny little thing counting irrevocably towards your final mark, right from the get go. ...
The problem for a teacher is how do you get the students to study? Most students (including me), need a nudge to keep them studying. This is a particular problem with online courses. An extreme example are MOOCs, where less than 10% of students complete successfully. One solution is regular activities for students, encouraged by marks.
The vocational education and training sector tests everything the student does, students must pass every test, but they can have multiple attempts, and a pass is all they need. Universities traditionally have a few large tests, graded on a scale. I have blended the two approaches in a university course, with weekly tests for the basics, and four large tests for advanced knowledge and skills. The weekly tests reward students with a few marks, but only the best are counted, and do not count towards a high grade.
This is implemented in the course "ICT Sustainability" (COMP7310 at the Australian National University, and COMP635 at Athabasca University):
http://www.tomw.net.au/ict_sustainability/assessment.shtml -- Tom Worthington, MEd FHEA FACS CP http://www.tomw.net.au +61(0)419496150 TomW Communications Pty Ltd. PO Box 13, Belconnen ACT 2617, Australia Liability limited by a scheme approved under Prof. Standards Legislation Honorary Lecturer, Computer Science, Australian National University https://cecs.anu.edu.au/research/profile/tom-worthington _______________________________________________ Link mailing list [email protected] http://mailman.anu.edu.au/mailman/listinfo/link
