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Development of a Web-Based Groupwork Assessment Tool Groupwork and Assessment Methods Demonstration of Software Discussion Hannah Whaley David Walker h.whaley@dundee.ac.uk d.j.walker@dundee.ac.uk Learning Enhancement Unit University of Dundee
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Overview Use of group working in Higher Education Assessment of group working skills Development of tool Demo Pilots and potential applications Further work Discussion
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Groupwork – Increasing Use Team Skills (employer/industry pressure) Communication Division of tasks Collaboration Evaluation of other people’s work Increasing student class sizes (not increasing staff numbers) Group working eases marking Makes multiple hand-ins feasible Easier to see groups of students Collaborative learning principles Larger projects can be tackled Engaging with others Learning to divide and manage work
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Groupwork – Changes in Use More online working Harder for lecturers to see the group dynamics in action More frequent use of groupwork within modules Can students use this to develop their skills within a particular group? Can they transfer these skills to other groups? More complex tasks and division of work Harder than ever to provide individual marks for collaborative work
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Groupwork – Issues Team Skills (employer/industry pressure) Team skills need to be taught, learnt and practised Are they being marked on these skills? Increasing student class sizes (not increasing staff numbers) Difficult for staff to be involved and know exactly what is happening in the group Collaborative learning principles Danger of ‘free loaders’ or ‘take overs’ Difficult to assess who actually did the work
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Groupwork Assessment Few changes or adaptations in assessment methods Most common is the division of 100 marks between the team and the assessment mark is weighted accordingly Often paper based, causing administrative burden if anything more than basic information is gathered Often completed in class, or has to be agreed upon by team members
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Issues to Solve Provide staff with more information without increasing the administrative burden Give students a chance to provide clearer feedback about their group Provide the lecturer with the means to issue fairer grades Empower the lecturer to provide better feedback and teaching based on group performance Introduce an element of privacy for the students
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Development Iterative design process Feasibility study Focus groups Design evaluations Pilots User centred design process Hix and Hartson ‘Star Model’ (1992) User Implementation Task analysis Functional analysis Prototyping Requirements specification Conceptual design Formal design
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Technology Web based PHP Server side scripting language allowing manipulation of scores and data SQL database Allows flexible and fast storage and retrieval of results Secure and private Compatability No additional download needed Cross browser and platform compatability
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Groupwork Assessment Tool Group task still completed independently of the tool Tool provides a method for scoring team members on group performance Lecturer maintains flexibility of assessment creation and feedback to students Students – complete task as normal Lecturer – creates groupwork assessment online Students – mark themselves and each other using the tool Lecturer – can see the collated results online
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Criteria for Assessment Harmony Did the group member show flexibility and willingness to work for consensus? Support Did the group member support others who show leadership? Management Did the group member offer leadership when the team needs it? Completion Did the group member fulfill the tasks set to the group? Participation Did the group member offer constructive feedback on others' ideas? Contribution Did the group member contribute to the group by sharing ideas and views? Communication Did the group member know when to speak and when to listen to help the team?
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Marking Scales Available 0-N Scale 3 - the group member always showed this 2 - the group member often showed this 1 - the group member occasionally showed this 0 - the group member never showed this N - the group member had a negative effect 1-5 Scale 1 - the student's skills in this area were not evident 2 - the student's skills in this area were beginning to show 3 - the student's skills in this area were developing throughout 4 - the student's skills in this area were accomplished throughout 5 - the student's skills in this area were exemplary throughout Percentage >70 - the student's skills in this area were excellent 60-69% - the student's skills in this area were very good 50-59% - the student's skills in this area were good 40-49% - the student's skills in this area were satisfactory 20-39% - the student's skills in this area were marginal 0-20% - the student's skills in this area were unsatisfactory
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Groupwork Assessment Tool Demo Setup of an assessment Viewing results Student completion of exercise
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Groupwork Assessment Tool
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Pilots of the system Various pilots of the system conducted at the University of Dundee All have been formative assessment or low stakes summative (5%) Welcomed by the students – one class requested to peer assess their groups Welcomed by the staff – much easier than paper based and assessment software based attempts in previous years Staff keen to use it for teaching purposes – so far only used for assessment purposes Provided ‘back up’ for observations “ I realise I didn’t do well in my group ” “We would like to peer assess each other” “I wish I could have used it with my students at the start of the year as well”
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Potential Uses Learning and teaching tool for groupwork skills E.g. Can be completed at start and end of project Grading of formative/summative group assignments Feedback on group progress for staff in advance of meetings Research purposes Others?
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Further work on the tool…. More flexibility in the criteria Requests for up to 30 criteria (!) Ability to change criteria to make it fit more specific purposes More statistics Highlight unusual scoring patterns Provide class wide statistics to allow more feedback Downloadable statistics Possibly more for research than teaching Blackboard integration Access to class lists Makes it easier for staff and students that use blackboard currently
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Discussion… Criteria – would you want to change them? How many is too many? Other potential uses? Would you use it? Is it useful as a stand-alone tool?
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Discussion Hannah Whaley University of Dundee h.whaley@dundee.ac.uk David Walker University of Dundee d.j.walker@dundee.ac.uk Thanks!
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