You can also have students, before turning in their scantron, use a pen to play 
"connect the dots".  The student draws one long line (must be in pen!) on the 
scantron, going through each marked answer.  


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Sue Frantz                 Highline Community College       
Psychology                Des Moines, WA
206.878.3710 x3404    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://flightline.highline.edu/sfrantz/ 
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APA Division 2: Society for the Teaching of Psychology
http://teachpsych.org/
Office of Teaching Resources in Psychology
Associate Director
Project Syllabus
http://teachpsych.org/otrp/syllabi/syllabi.php



From: Penley, Julie
Sent: Fri 4/4/2008 7:11 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: RE: [tips] Scantron tip




Beth,
I've thought about copying Scantrons, but don't look forward to copying 40-50 
Scantrons for each of the 4-5 exams in each of my courses.  I can imagine the 
nightmare of copying in huge (200+) sections, as well as the paper used and 
space required to store those copies (how long would you keep them.a semester?  
A year?
 
But I think it's an excellent idea to have 'insurance' of what students 
actually did put on their test.  After I run the Scantrons through the machine, 
I then take a felt-tip, roller ball, or other 'bigger' pen to put a hack mark 
through students' incorrect answers.   Sometimes, I have students mark more 
than one bubble per answer, so I mark through those as well.  Interestingly, 
once I started marking the Scantrons, the number of 'scantron machine errors' 
were reduced to zero.
 
Another benefit of this method is that I can catch the true machine errors 
(those machines can be pretty sensitive) and sometimes wind up giving the 
student a few more points that I otherwise would have missed.
 
Julie
 
 
 
Julie A. Penley, Ph.D.
Associate Professor of Psychology
Special Projects Assistant to the Dean (ESL, Reading, and Social Sciences)
El Paso Community College
PO Box 20500
El Paso, TX 79998-0500
Office phone: (915) 831-3210
Department fax: (915) 831-2324
 
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Beth Benoit
Sent: Friday, April 04, 2008 8:02 AM
To: Teaching in the Psychological Sciences (TIPS)
Subject: [tips] Scantron tip
 
I often use Scantrons (those bubble sheets) for part of tests (and use 
Scantrons and Blue Books as an example of something that might engender a 
classically conditioned reponse in people who are especially anxious about 
test-taking).  Recently, I saw the Dean of our department making copies of each 
student's Scantrons, in order to have a copy in case a student makes a change 
on it after it's returned and claims that he/she had the correct answer.  I 
thought it was a good idea, though hoped it wouldn't be necessary.  (Our 
Scantron machine doesn't put a mark beside an incorrect answer as some do.)
 
So that is why, when a student brought her Scantron to me, claiming that it 
must have been incorrectly graded, I was able to pull out the original, finding 
that she had indeed changed an answer after it was handed back to her.  I'm not 
looking forward to confronting her about her academic dishonesty, but I will do 
it.
 
I'd used Scantrons for years, and it never occurred to me to make copies before 
I hand the originals back to the students, so thought I'd pass the advice on to 
others.  Of course, one way to insure that students don't change their answers 
is to hand them the copy of their answers, but frankly, perhaps there's a 
little bit of tempter in me, and I want to see who will actually cheat if they 
think they can get away with it.
 
Beth Benoit
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