WEBVTT 00:00:01.700 --> 00:00:03.120 align:center ERIC TREKELL: All right, everyone. 00:00:03.120 --> 00:00:03.630 align:center Welcome. 00:00:03.630 --> 00:00:05.540 align:center Thank you for joining us to discuss 00:00:05.540 --> 00:00:07.910 align:center the topic of developing alternative grading 00:00:07.910 --> 00:00:10.110 align:center assessments for students. 00:00:10.110 --> 00:00:12.830 align:center My name is Eric Trekell with the DO-IT Center at the University 00:00:12.830 --> 00:00:13.830 align:center of Washington. 00:00:13.830 --> 00:00:15.530 align:center And I'm joined by my DO-IT colleagues 00:00:15.530 --> 00:00:19.230 align:center Kayla Brown, Wendy Huang, Andrea Mano, and Brianna Blaser. 00:00:19.230 --> 00:00:21.500 align:center Our speaker today is Kevin Lin. 00:00:21.500 --> 00:00:23.520 align:center This webinar is sponsored by AiiCE, 00:00:23.520 --> 00:00:26.210 align:center the Alliance for Interdisciplinary Innovations 00:00:26.210 --> 00:00:29.510 align:center in Computing Education, and is funded by a National Science 00:00:29.510 --> 00:00:33.920 align:center Foundation grant number 211-84-543. 00:00:33.920 --> 00:00:37.100 align:center As we begin today, I'd like to share some information regarding 00:00:37.100 --> 00:00:39.570 align:center accessibility features for today's meeting. 00:00:39.570 --> 00:00:42.590 align:center This information will also be posted in the chat. 00:00:42.590 --> 00:00:45.020 align:center We are recording this meeting. 00:00:45.020 --> 00:00:47.000 align:center Professional captions are being provided 00:00:47.000 --> 00:00:49.340 align:center and can be accessed in an external browser 00:00:49.340 --> 00:00:55.200 align:center window via the SteamText link posted in the chat. 00:00:55.200 --> 00:00:58.460 align:center Alternately, you can utilize auto captions 00:00:58.460 --> 00:01:03.540 align:center by selecting the CC icon in the Zoom menu bar. 00:01:03.540 --> 00:01:05.830 align:center We do have ASL interpreters today. 00:01:05.830 --> 00:01:08.400 align:center They can be multipinned in your Zoom window 00:01:08.400 --> 00:01:11.200 align:center if you would like to utilize ASL interpreting. 00:01:11.200 --> 00:01:15.120 align:center If you need multipin feature, please request multipin 00:01:15.120 --> 00:01:18.450 align:center by messaging one of my colleagues, Wendy Huang or Kayla 00:01:18.450 --> 00:01:21.930 align:center Brown, and requesting that. 00:01:21.930 --> 00:01:25.090 align:center And now I'd like to introduce and welcome our presenter. 00:01:25.090 --> 00:01:27.390 align:center Kevin Lin is an assistant teaching professor 00:01:27.390 --> 00:01:30.030 align:center in the Paul G. Allen School of Computing Science 00:01:30.030 --> 00:01:32.530 align:center and Engineering at the University of Washington. 00:01:32.530 --> 00:01:36.240 align:center He's also codirector of the Center for Learning, Computing 00:01:36.240 --> 00:01:37.690 align:center and Imagination. 00:01:37.690 --> 00:01:40.200 align:center He provides leadership on instructional innovation 00:01:40.200 --> 00:01:42.540 align:center and data programming and data structures. 00:01:42.540 --> 00:01:45.300 align:center Kevin received his MS in computer science from UC 00:01:45.300 --> 00:01:47.820 align:center Berkeley, where he coordinated the teaching and delivery 00:01:47.820 --> 00:01:51.600 align:center of very large-scale CS undergraduate courses to over 00:01:51.600 --> 00:01:54.150 align:center 1,000 students every semester. 00:01:54.150 --> 00:01:57.840 align:center Kevin, it's a pleasure to have you with us. 00:01:57.840 --> 00:01:59.948 align:center KEVIN LIN: Thank you for the introduction, Eric. 00:01:59.948 --> 00:02:00.740 align:center ERIC TREKELL: Yeah. 00:02:00.740 --> 00:02:02.300 align:center Take it away. 00:02:02.300 --> 00:02:03.300 align:center KEVIN LIN: Hi, everyone. 00:02:03.300 --> 00:02:07.500 align:center My name is Kevin Lin, and I'm giving the talk for today. 00:02:07.500 --> 00:02:09.410 align:center And in this today's talk, I'm going 00:02:09.410 --> 00:02:11.870 align:center to reflect on my experiences with alternative grading 00:02:11.870 --> 00:02:15.050 align:center practices that I think hope to better represent 00:02:15.050 --> 00:02:17.330 align:center the learning that students achieve over time 00:02:17.330 --> 00:02:19.170 align:center by producing more equitable outcomes, 00:02:19.170 --> 00:02:21.720 align:center changing the way that we determine final grades. 00:02:21.720 --> 00:02:23.630 align:center And moreover, I see alternative grading 00:02:23.630 --> 00:02:25.820 align:center as really having the potential to empower students 00:02:25.820 --> 00:02:28.190 align:center by making space for really creative student 00:02:28.190 --> 00:02:31.305 align:center work that we might not otherwise believe we could incorporate 00:02:31.305 --> 00:02:32.930 align:center in our classes because oftentimes we're 00:02:32.930 --> 00:02:34.190 align:center thinking about things in terms of, 00:02:34.190 --> 00:02:36.210 align:center how many percentage points should this be worth? 00:02:36.210 --> 00:02:38.227 align:center Or how many points do I need to grade this on? 00:02:38.227 --> 00:02:39.810 align:center And that can really restrict, I think, 00:02:39.810 --> 00:02:41.727 align:center some of our own creativity as faculty in terms 00:02:41.727 --> 00:02:43.550 align:center of the assignments we give. 00:02:43.550 --> 00:02:45.050 align:center But I'll also point out that I think 00:02:45.050 --> 00:02:48.980 align:center that grading policies on their own aren't often enough. 00:02:48.980 --> 00:02:51.507 align:center For example, here I work at the University of Washington. 00:02:51.507 --> 00:02:53.340 align:center There's a lot of grade-focused culture here. 00:02:53.340 --> 00:02:54.720 align:center I think students are very high achieving 00:02:54.720 --> 00:02:56.390 align:center but that also means high achieving 00:02:56.390 --> 00:02:58.380 align:center toward that end of getting a certain grade 00:02:58.380 --> 00:02:59.850 align:center in addition to learning the material that they 00:02:59.850 --> 00:03:00.433 align:center want to learn. 00:03:00.433 --> 00:03:03.780 align:center So I'll also discuss some of the challenges that I faced 00:03:03.780 --> 00:03:05.850 align:center and how I work toward really building 00:03:05.850 --> 00:03:10.110 align:center better relationships between students, educators, and grades. 00:03:10.110 --> 00:03:13.770 align:center I will also note that I have all the materials for this slide 00:03:13.770 --> 00:03:16.120 align:center that you're seeing right now on my website, 00:03:16.120 --> 00:03:18.270 align:center and I think Eric will be sending this 00:03:18.270 --> 00:03:20.310 align:center out shortly, either over Zoom chat 00:03:20.310 --> 00:03:23.880 align:center or maybe later over the email. 00:03:23.880 --> 00:03:25.870 align:center But the outline of the talk goes like this. 00:03:25.870 --> 00:03:28.213 align:center We'll first talk about the motivation for the problem. 00:03:28.213 --> 00:03:29.880 align:center Then I'll discuss some of the philosophy 00:03:29.880 --> 00:03:32.700 align:center of alternative grading before sharing some example policies 00:03:32.700 --> 00:03:35.610 align:center that we've used in undergraduate computing courses here at UW. 00:03:35.610 --> 00:03:38.500 align:center And then finally reflect on some of the details and subtleties-- 00:03:38.500 --> 00:03:39.960 align:center that's kind of point four there-- 00:03:39.960 --> 00:03:41.910 align:center of alternative grading. 00:03:41.910 --> 00:03:44.070 align:center I think there will be ways for you to engage 00:03:44.070 --> 00:03:46.497 align:center using, for example, Q & A. Or if you 00:03:46.497 --> 00:03:48.330 align:center have a question on your mind, because you're 00:03:48.330 --> 00:03:50.610 align:center in front of your computer, you can type it down. 00:03:50.610 --> 00:03:52.270 align:center I'm going to go over all the material, 00:03:52.270 --> 00:03:53.880 align:center and I think it's probably best to take questions more 00:03:53.880 --> 00:03:56.365 align:center toward the end if you don't have a particular preference 00:03:56.365 --> 00:03:56.865 align:center for that. 00:03:59.380 --> 00:04:01.150 align:center Jumping in, I wanted to first start 00:04:01.150 --> 00:04:04.120 align:center with this opening question of really understanding 00:04:04.120 --> 00:04:09.310 align:center what relationships are in this issue of teaching 00:04:09.310 --> 00:04:12.340 align:center and relationships really being at the heart of teaching 00:04:12.340 --> 00:04:15.740 align:center between students, educators, between students and peers, 00:04:15.740 --> 00:04:18.440 align:center between students and their texts or problems or worlds. 00:04:18.440 --> 00:04:21.910 align:center I think all of this is really framed by this answer 00:04:21.910 --> 00:04:25.370 align:center to this question of, why are we gathered here to learn this? 00:04:25.370 --> 00:04:27.020 align:center And specifically, like I mentioned, 00:04:27.020 --> 00:04:28.240 align:center there's that students and teaching team. 00:04:28.240 --> 00:04:29.050 align:center That's the "we." 00:04:29.050 --> 00:04:30.250 align:center There's a time and place. 00:04:30.250 --> 00:04:32.523 align:center There's here and then this, which is the subject. 00:04:32.523 --> 00:04:33.940 align:center And I think all three of these are 00:04:33.940 --> 00:04:37.000 align:center things that we as educators are thinking about or navigating 00:04:37.000 --> 00:04:38.980 align:center when we're conducting teaching. 00:04:38.980 --> 00:04:41.830 align:center But I think one thing, one relationship that I have studied 00:04:41.830 --> 00:04:45.580 align:center a lot in discussion of this talk, is how grading, I think, 00:04:45.580 --> 00:04:47.590 align:center is in the background or possibly sometimes 00:04:47.590 --> 00:04:50.350 align:center in the foreground of all this work that we're doing, right? 00:04:50.350 --> 00:04:52.040 align:center Grading affects all these relationships. 00:04:52.040 --> 00:04:53.915 align:center It moderates our relationships with students, 00:04:53.915 --> 00:04:55.340 align:center how students relate to each other, 00:04:55.340 --> 00:04:57.460 align:center for sure, how they move through physical spaces 00:04:57.460 --> 00:04:59.628 align:center of our classrooms, the policies we allow, 00:04:59.628 --> 00:05:01.670 align:center the policies we don't allow, the things we grade, 00:05:01.670 --> 00:05:03.670 align:center the things we don't grade, and also 00:05:03.670 --> 00:05:05.710 align:center their interest in that subject matter. 00:05:05.710 --> 00:05:07.755 align:center So in this talk, I'll tend to focus more so 00:05:07.755 --> 00:05:09.130 align:center on our relationship with students 00:05:09.130 --> 00:05:12.700 align:center as moderated by this grading activity 00:05:12.700 --> 00:05:15.100 align:center that we're all conducting here when 00:05:15.100 --> 00:05:18.760 align:center we teach at an institution of higher education. 00:05:18.760 --> 00:05:20.860 align:center I wanted to start with a story that I've 00:05:20.860 --> 00:05:24.700 align:center learned from Mina Zavary, who's a PhD student in Human-Centered 00:05:24.700 --> 00:05:27.740 align:center Design and Engineering here at the University of Washington. 00:05:27.740 --> 00:05:30.610 align:center And one of her studies that she's investigated is really 00:05:30.610 --> 00:05:33.790 align:center some of the work studying UW archives and debates from 00:05:33.790 --> 00:05:37.240 align:center the 1970s, from UW history, talking about changes to UW 00:05:37.240 --> 00:05:39.380 align:center grading policies, which it turns out, 00:05:39.380 --> 00:05:42.850 align:center UW has this numeric grading scale that is somewhat unusual 00:05:42.850 --> 00:05:46.660 align:center even in the US, where instead of assigning A's, B's, or C's, UW 00:05:46.660 --> 00:05:49.310 align:center has this policy that assigns on 0.1 increments. 00:05:49.310 --> 00:05:52.510 align:center So every student in every major course that they're taking 00:05:52.510 --> 00:05:53.930 align:center can get a 4.0. 00:05:53.930 --> 00:05:54.980 align:center They can get a 3.9. 00:05:54.980 --> 00:05:55.820 align:center They can get a 3.8. 00:05:55.820 --> 00:05:57.050 align:center They can get 3.7. 00:05:57.050 --> 00:05:59.590 align:center And so we're assigning grades as instructors 00:05:59.590 --> 00:06:01.270 align:center on these 0.1 increments. 00:06:01.270 --> 00:06:02.720 align:center But that wasn't always the case. 00:06:02.720 --> 00:06:05.740 align:center Mina, like I mentioned, she actually noted that this was 00:06:05.740 --> 00:06:08.770 align:center a discussion that happened in the 1970s at the UW University 00:06:08.770 --> 00:06:11.470 align:center level, and there were concerns and debates raised about 00:06:11.470 --> 00:06:15.387 align:center changing from ABC letter grades to these 0.1 numeric grades. 00:06:15.387 --> 00:06:17.470 align:center Would such a change to the University-wide grading 00:06:17.470 --> 00:06:20.150 align:center practices actually produce better grades? 00:06:20.150 --> 00:06:22.150 align:center Some proponents of the change argued that grades 00:06:22.150 --> 00:06:23.480 align:center would become more accurate. 00:06:23.480 --> 00:06:26.140 align:center But opponents of the proposal suggested 00:06:26.140 --> 00:06:28.690 align:center that actually making these grading increments smaller 00:06:28.690 --> 00:06:31.760 align:center would increase precision but not necessarily accuracy. 00:06:31.760 --> 00:06:34.355 align:center So you have numbers that have more significant digits, 00:06:34.355 --> 00:06:36.730 align:center but does it actually give you more information about what 00:06:36.730 --> 00:06:38.043 align:center students can actually achieve? 00:06:38.043 --> 00:06:40.210 align:center And can you really tell the difference between a 3.3 00:06:40.210 --> 00:06:41.506 align:center and a 3.4? 00:06:41.506 --> 00:06:44.900 align:center How would this system improve on what we've done in the past? 00:06:44.900 --> 00:06:49.330 align:center And really, what does grading actually serve? 00:06:49.330 --> 00:06:52.120 align:center And so these questions of grading, I think, in the UW, 00:06:52.120 --> 00:06:55.140 align:center University Washington-specific community 00:06:55.140 --> 00:06:56.640 align:center are part of a larger dialogue that 00:06:56.640 --> 00:06:59.760 align:center have happened over the past 100 or more years. 00:06:59.760 --> 00:07:02.160 align:center So Mark Guzdial is a really prolific researcher 00:07:02.160 --> 00:07:04.410 align:center in computing education research and a professor 00:07:04.410 --> 00:07:06.180 align:center at the University of Michigan. 00:07:06.180 --> 00:07:09.060 align:center He recounts how the US education system was significantly 00:07:09.060 --> 00:07:10.470 align:center shaped by four words-- 00:07:10.470 --> 00:07:11.440 align:center Thorndike won. 00:07:11.440 --> 00:07:12.660 align:center Dewey lost. 00:07:12.660 --> 00:07:14.790 align:center And I'm going to read this quote by Mark. 00:07:14.790 --> 00:07:16.903 align:center "Dewey believed in educating the student, 00:07:16.903 --> 00:07:18.570 align:center meeting them where they were and helping 00:07:18.570 --> 00:07:19.987 align:center them to develop in their community 00:07:19.987 --> 00:07:22.500 align:center through teacher-driven innovations in the classroom. 00:07:22.500 --> 00:07:24.970 align:center Thorndike was about administrative systems, grades, 00:07:24.970 --> 00:07:27.640 align:center teacher credentialing, teacher requirements and credentialing, 00:07:27.640 --> 00:07:30.750 align:center preparing students for vocations, testing, and teachers 00:07:30.750 --> 00:07:32.620 align:center implementing what researchers invent. 00:07:32.620 --> 00:07:35.700 align:center The US education system favors the latter." 00:07:35.700 --> 00:07:38.440 align:center Mark goes on to quote David Labaree's paper, 00:07:38.440 --> 00:07:39.390 align:center "How Dewey Lost-- 00:07:39.390 --> 00:07:43.470 align:center The Victory of David Sneddon and Social Efficiency in the Reform 00:07:43.470 --> 00:07:45.300 align:center of American Education." 00:07:45.300 --> 00:07:47.070 align:center "The pedagogically progressive vision 00:07:47.070 --> 00:07:50.310 align:center of education, child-centered, inquiry-based, personally 00:07:50.310 --> 00:07:52.960 align:center engaging education is a hothouse flower 00:07:52.960 --> 00:07:56.180 align:center trying to survive in the stony environment of public education. 00:07:56.180 --> 00:07:57.730 align:center It won't thrive unless conditions 00:07:57.730 --> 00:07:59.600 align:center are ideal since, among other things, 00:07:59.600 --> 00:08:02.770 align:center it requires committed, creative, energetic, and highly 00:08:02.770 --> 00:08:05.620 align:center educated teachers who are willing and able to construct 00:08:05.620 --> 00:08:09.710 align:center education to order, customized for students in the classroom 00:08:09.710 --> 00:08:12.940 align:center and requires broad public and fiscal support for education 00:08:12.940 --> 00:08:15.790 align:center as an investment in students, rather than an investment 00:08:15.790 --> 00:08:17.652 align:center in economic productivity. 00:08:17.652 --> 00:08:19.360 align:center But the administrative progressive vision 00:08:19.360 --> 00:08:21.880 align:center of education as a prudent investment 00:08:21.880 --> 00:08:25.100 align:center in a socially and economically efficient future is a weed. 00:08:25.100 --> 00:08:27.340 align:center It will grow almost anywhere." 00:08:27.340 --> 00:08:30.760 align:center So I think what Thorndike and Dewey, this dialogue that Mark 00:08:30.760 --> 00:08:33.080 align:center is foregrounding, making apparent to us, 00:08:33.080 --> 00:08:35.320 align:center reminding us about, teaching us about, really, 00:08:35.320 --> 00:08:37.179 align:center and I think it's really kind of talking 00:08:37.179 --> 00:08:40.669 align:center about this interesting dialogue that happens constantly, 00:08:40.669 --> 00:08:42.669 align:center even now today, even more so today, you 00:08:42.669 --> 00:08:45.358 align:center could argue, between, what is the purpose of education? 00:08:45.358 --> 00:08:46.400 align:center Who should be leading it? 00:08:46.400 --> 00:08:47.480 align:center Why should we fund it? 00:08:47.480 --> 00:08:50.440 align:center And our grading systems today are really ultimately shaped 00:08:50.440 --> 00:08:52.880 align:center by these administrative progressive vision of education 00:08:52.880 --> 00:08:54.620 align:center that ultimately won. 00:08:54.620 --> 00:08:55.440 align:center Thorndike won. 00:08:55.440 --> 00:08:57.180 align:center Dewey lost. 00:08:57.180 --> 00:08:59.070 align:center So it's worth keeping all of that in mind. 00:08:59.070 --> 00:09:02.040 align:center And yet, as much as I've painted a really depressing picture, 00:09:02.040 --> 00:09:03.960 align:center I think that there are alternatives. 00:09:03.960 --> 00:09:07.230 align:center I think that these alternatives actually exist in real places. 00:09:07.230 --> 00:09:10.280 align:center So I'll give you an example here in Washington State. 00:09:10.280 --> 00:09:13.770 align:center Less than maybe like two hours drive away, 00:09:13.770 --> 00:09:16.920 align:center one and a half hour's drive away is Olympia, Washington. 00:09:16.920 --> 00:09:20.220 align:center We have our Evergreen State College in Washington State. 00:09:20.220 --> 00:09:22.020 align:center Our colleagues in Evergreen State College, 00:09:22.020 --> 00:09:24.230 align:center they actually don't assign grade points 00:09:24.230 --> 00:09:28.290 align:center like A, B, C. They don't assign 0.1 increment grades. 00:09:28.290 --> 00:09:30.350 align:center Instead, they write these narrative evaluations 00:09:30.350 --> 00:09:31.017 align:center of student work. 00:09:31.017 --> 00:09:32.933 align:center So each faculty, when they're assigning grades 00:09:32.933 --> 00:09:34.520 align:center at the end of the quarter, they write 00:09:34.520 --> 00:09:36.740 align:center narratives that explain, that evaluate 00:09:36.740 --> 00:09:38.790 align:center student's academic achievement in writing, 00:09:38.790 --> 00:09:40.550 align:center and discuss them with students one on one 00:09:40.550 --> 00:09:41.820 align:center during evaluations week. 00:09:41.820 --> 00:09:44.900 align:center So they have a separate week for that in their courses. 00:09:44.900 --> 00:09:47.030 align:center Students then have a chance to write and turn 00:09:47.030 --> 00:09:49.872 align:center in self evaluations of how they did themselves, 00:09:49.872 --> 00:09:52.080 align:center in addition to course evaluations of how they thought 00:09:52.080 --> 00:09:53.110 align:center the instructor did. 00:09:53.110 --> 00:09:55.930 align:center So it really becomes not just the students are evaluating you, 00:09:55.930 --> 00:09:57.270 align:center you're evaluating the students, but there's 00:09:57.270 --> 00:09:58.980 align:center a lot of dialogue and self-reflection 00:09:58.980 --> 00:10:00.188 align:center that happens in this process. 00:10:00.188 --> 00:10:02.605 align:center And it's something that I find really amazing that they've 00:10:02.605 --> 00:10:05.070 align:center actually made this work across the entire Evergreen State 00:10:05.070 --> 00:10:06.265 align:center College. 00:10:06.265 --> 00:10:08.890 align:center Now, you might wonder, OK, maybe that's just a smaller college, 00:10:08.890 --> 00:10:12.210 align:center but even at scale at MIT, the registrar's office has 00:10:12.210 --> 00:10:15.090 align:center this page that talks about their first-year grading policy that's 00:10:15.090 --> 00:10:18.180 align:center designed to give students time to adjust by gradually 00:10:18.180 --> 00:10:19.380 align:center introducing grades. 00:10:19.380 --> 00:10:21.210 align:center In the fall term, first-year students 00:10:21.210 --> 00:10:23.730 align:center receive a grade of either pass, or it's 00:10:23.730 --> 00:10:24.998 align:center dropped from their transcript. 00:10:24.998 --> 00:10:26.790 align:center And in the spring term, first-year students 00:10:26.790 --> 00:10:29.828 align:center receive either A, B, C, or it's drop from their transcript. 00:10:29.828 --> 00:10:31.620 align:center And so I think there's a lot of cool things 00:10:31.620 --> 00:10:34.290 align:center that we can actually learn, ideas that we can actually 00:10:34.290 --> 00:10:36.300 align:center borrow from other places that have still 00:10:36.300 --> 00:10:38.730 align:center found a balance between we live in this reality, 00:10:38.730 --> 00:10:40.480 align:center we live in this current reality right now, 00:10:40.480 --> 00:10:41.938 align:center and how can we actually make things 00:10:41.938 --> 00:10:45.585 align:center better, even at this entire university or college level? 00:10:45.585 --> 00:10:47.460 align:center And the Evergreen State College, because they 00:10:47.460 --> 00:10:49.880 align:center have to advertise to students, prospective students, 00:10:49.880 --> 00:10:52.660 align:center they have an example of a quote from a student here. 00:10:52.660 --> 00:10:55.540 align:center "It's rare to have a detailed essay from your professor 00:10:55.540 --> 00:10:57.860 align:center that not only reflects your skills and learning 00:10:57.860 --> 00:10:59.570 align:center but who you are as an individual. 00:10:59.570 --> 00:11:02.060 align:center My transcripts all sound like letters of recommendation. 00:11:02.060 --> 00:11:04.210 align:center They reflect everything I learned and everything 00:11:04.210 --> 00:11:05.507 align:center my teachers saw within me." 00:11:05.507 --> 00:11:07.090 align:center And I think that's just an amazing way 00:11:07.090 --> 00:11:09.060 align:center to imagine what grades could be, what 00:11:09.060 --> 00:11:11.560 align:center they could be in a world that wasn't necessarily constrained 00:11:11.560 --> 00:11:14.290 align:center by this idea that they have to fit A, B C, buckets 00:11:14.290 --> 00:11:15.800 align:center or 0.1 increments. 00:11:15.800 --> 00:11:19.090 align:center And I want to take this as an opportunity to urge all of us 00:11:19.090 --> 00:11:20.740 align:center to think about, What could those grades 00:11:20.740 --> 00:11:22.390 align:center look like in our classroom? because I 00:11:22.390 --> 00:11:24.730 align:center think that's the subject that I'm really close to dear 00:11:24.730 --> 00:11:26.925 align:center to my heart in this talk today. 00:11:30.091 --> 00:11:31.570 align:center So I think we should question how 00:11:31.570 --> 00:11:33.040 align:center we grade, because grades moderate 00:11:33.040 --> 00:11:34.190 align:center our relationship with students. 00:11:34.190 --> 00:11:35.290 align:center And I think regardless of how you 00:11:35.290 --> 00:11:37.010 align:center feel about these different policy proposals, 00:11:37.010 --> 00:11:39.020 align:center I think there are strengths and weaknesses to both. 00:11:39.020 --> 00:11:40.600 align:center I think you can consider scholarships 00:11:40.600 --> 00:11:43.360 align:center and the requirements required by scholarships, that students have 00:11:43.360 --> 00:11:45.820 align:center to keep up with as being one possibly 00:11:45.820 --> 00:11:47.440 align:center mediating factor for thinking through, 00:11:47.440 --> 00:11:50.390 align:center how do we design grading systems? 00:11:50.390 --> 00:11:52.180 align:center But I think one of the questions that 00:11:52.180 --> 00:11:55.370 align:center was really interesting that I did not hear so much 00:11:55.370 --> 00:11:58.450 align:center was this question that Mina brought up to me, that she 00:11:58.450 --> 00:12:01.180 align:center noticed that what was notably absent in all of this discussion 00:12:01.180 --> 00:12:02.572 align:center was what students thought. 00:12:02.572 --> 00:12:05.030 align:center What did students think about changing this grading system? 00:12:05.030 --> 00:12:07.072 align:center What did students think about this particular way 00:12:07.072 --> 00:12:13.578 align:center of constructing grades around their experiences? 00:12:13.578 --> 00:12:15.370 align:center And so I want to bring this question up of, 00:12:15.370 --> 00:12:18.005 align:center what are the impacts of grading policies? 00:12:18.005 --> 00:12:20.380 align:center So next I'll talk a little bit about some research that's 00:12:20.380 --> 00:12:22.030 align:center being done in this space. 00:12:22.030 --> 00:12:25.450 align:center And then I'll be more concrete about what we've done here in CS 00:12:25.450 --> 00:12:28.210 align:center in particular at UW. 00:12:28.210 --> 00:12:30.370 align:center So first, I want to claim that I think policies 00:12:30.370 --> 00:12:31.670 align:center have really big impacts. 00:12:31.670 --> 00:12:34.180 align:center So Eman Sherif, one of our PhD students 00:12:34.180 --> 00:12:37.240 align:center in computer science engineering, she does interesting research 00:12:37.240 --> 00:12:39.070 align:center at the intersection of assessment 00:12:39.070 --> 00:12:41.270 align:center and marginalized student experiences. 00:12:41.270 --> 00:12:44.260 align:center She has a paper at ICER 2024 here called "Exploring 00:12:44.260 --> 00:12:47.110 align:center the Impact of Assessment Policies on Marginalized 00:12:47.110 --> 00:12:49.270 align:center Students' Experiences in Post-Secondary Programming 00:12:49.270 --> 00:12:50.778 align:center Courses." 00:12:50.778 --> 00:12:52.570 align:center And through these semistructured interviews 00:12:52.570 --> 00:12:54.820 align:center of students with underrepresented social 00:12:54.820 --> 00:12:57.550 align:center identities in computing, Eman identified 10 ways 00:12:57.550 --> 00:12:59.410 align:center that policies interacted with student lives 00:12:59.410 --> 00:13:01.420 align:center to create or heighten inequities. 00:13:01.420 --> 00:13:04.060 align:center For instance, one student she interviewed really 00:13:04.060 --> 00:13:07.180 align:center didn't want to miss opportunities for extra credit 00:13:07.180 --> 00:13:10.630 align:center because previously the professor didn't explain expectations 00:13:10.630 --> 00:13:13.180 align:center for assignments, causing her to perform poorly 00:13:13.180 --> 00:13:14.840 align:center on the majority of assignments. 00:13:14.840 --> 00:13:16.600 align:center So one of the quotes here is like, "I even 00:13:16.600 --> 00:13:18.350 align:center remember my family was like, what are you doing? 00:13:18.350 --> 00:13:19.400 align:center You're sick with COVID." 00:13:19.400 --> 00:13:21.817 align:center And then she felt like, "Yeah, I got to go to quiz section 00:13:21.817 --> 00:13:23.272 align:center in case he gives extra credit." 00:13:23.272 --> 00:13:24.730 align:center Our assessment and grading policies 00:13:24.730 --> 00:13:26.570 align:center have real impacts on student lives. 00:13:26.570 --> 00:13:29.230 align:center When students are forced to decide between prioritizing 00:13:29.230 --> 00:13:31.600 align:center their course policy and themselves, 00:13:31.600 --> 00:13:33.880 align:center their personal responsibilities, they often 00:13:33.880 --> 00:13:36.035 align:center choose to follow course policy. 00:13:36.035 --> 00:13:38.410 align:center So what does this really reflect about our relationships? 00:13:38.410 --> 00:13:39.840 align:center is the question I want to ask. 00:13:39.840 --> 00:13:42.340 align:center If students feel like they have to choose between doing what 00:13:42.340 --> 00:13:44.810 align:center is best for themselves versus what's best for their grade, 00:13:44.810 --> 00:13:46.310 align:center what does this mean for students who 00:13:46.310 --> 00:13:49.490 align:center need to miss a few sections due to inflexible part-time job 00:13:49.490 --> 00:13:52.138 align:center shifts, caretaking responsibilities, students who 00:13:52.138 --> 00:13:54.680 align:center are behind on course materials and wouldn't find quiz section 00:13:54.680 --> 00:13:56.100 align:center beneficial anyways, right? 00:13:56.100 --> 00:13:57.770 align:center There can be so many reasons why they 00:13:57.770 --> 00:14:01.370 align:center may want to opt out of an activity on a certain day. 00:14:01.370 --> 00:14:04.607 align:center And these participation policies can really affect final grades. 00:14:04.607 --> 00:14:06.440 align:center At the same time, we think that-- at least I 00:14:06.440 --> 00:14:08.280 align:center think that participation is important. 00:14:08.280 --> 00:14:10.543 align:center And without the extrinsic motivation of grades, 00:14:10.543 --> 00:14:11.960 align:center I find that many students are less 00:14:11.960 --> 00:14:14.390 align:center likely to prioritize it compared to other work that's 00:14:14.390 --> 00:14:15.327 align:center less flexible. 00:14:15.327 --> 00:14:17.160 align:center So because students are taking many courses, 00:14:17.160 --> 00:14:18.952 align:center they may see that this assignment is graded 00:14:18.952 --> 00:14:21.230 align:center and it's due, and then therefore it's 00:14:21.230 --> 00:14:23.713 align:center important versus, say, participation in a class. 00:14:23.713 --> 00:14:24.630 align:center Maybe it's not graded. 00:14:24.630 --> 00:14:26.672 align:center Maybe it's not as important. 00:14:26.672 --> 00:14:28.380 align:center But just as grades can motivate students, 00:14:28.380 --> 00:14:30.680 align:center I think they can also demotivate students, too. 00:14:30.680 --> 00:14:33.530 align:center Robert Talbert, a professor of mathematics 00:14:33.530 --> 00:14:36.500 align:center at Grand Valley State University, talks 00:14:36.500 --> 00:14:39.020 align:center about this idea about-- 00:14:39.020 --> 00:14:41.030 align:center it's really a story that he had that got 00:14:41.030 --> 00:14:42.530 align:center him really interested in alternative 00:14:42.530 --> 00:14:44.525 align:center grading in the first place. 00:14:44.525 --> 00:14:46.400 align:center So he's talking about a student in his class. 00:14:46.400 --> 00:14:48.417 align:center She crashed and burned on the first exam 00:14:48.417 --> 00:14:50.500 align:center and was eliminated from getting an A in the class. 00:14:50.500 --> 00:14:54.470 align:center In one shot, no A. Second exam, same thing-- in one shot, 00:14:54.470 --> 00:14:56.080 align:center she can't get a B in the class. 00:14:56.080 --> 00:14:59.110 align:center And I sat there and just watched her sense 00:14:59.110 --> 00:15:01.090 align:center of self-worth and her excitement in the class 00:15:01.090 --> 00:15:03.640 align:center just decay away right before my eyes. 00:15:03.640 --> 00:15:06.212 align:center And I think that's something that maybe you 00:15:06.212 --> 00:15:07.670 align:center may have experienced this yourself, 00:15:07.670 --> 00:15:09.587 align:center or maybe you've experienced from someone else. 00:15:09.587 --> 00:15:12.443 align:center But it's something that I think really rings deeply to my heart, 00:15:12.443 --> 00:15:14.110 align:center too, because I've personally experienced 00:15:14.110 --> 00:15:17.400 align:center that in my own course and the way that I grade it as well. 00:15:20.350 --> 00:15:23.140 align:center So all this that I've said in the first 15 minutes or so 00:15:23.140 --> 00:15:26.200 align:center is that I think it's really interesting that grading 00:15:26.200 --> 00:15:29.350 align:center is an activity that moderates our relationship with students 00:15:29.350 --> 00:15:30.290 align:center and teachers. 00:15:30.290 --> 00:15:31.795 align:center It's not really only that students 00:15:31.795 --> 00:15:33.920 align:center have to choose between themselves and their grades. 00:15:33.920 --> 00:15:36.650 align:center When one student asks for extra time, as an instructor, 00:15:36.650 --> 00:15:39.700 align:center I'm also thinking to myself, can I offer that extra time 00:15:39.700 --> 00:15:40.910 align:center to everyone in the class? 00:15:40.910 --> 00:15:43.300 align:center How do I design my policy so that, if I'm 00:15:43.300 --> 00:15:46.470 align:center offering this person extra time on the assessment, is it fair? 00:15:46.470 --> 00:15:49.910 align:center Can I apply that policy the same to everyone in my class? 00:15:49.910 --> 00:15:51.810 align:center Or if a student struggled with an assignment, 00:15:51.810 --> 00:15:53.250 align:center can I give them an extra makeup? 00:15:53.250 --> 00:15:54.990 align:center And in the large classes that I teach, 00:15:54.990 --> 00:15:57.440 align:center I really feel like I really often 00:15:57.440 --> 00:15:59.060 align:center worry about all the students who don't 00:15:59.060 --> 00:16:01.760 align:center feel like it's their prerogative to ask me these questions 00:16:01.760 --> 00:16:03.900 align:center or request exceptions to our policies. 00:16:03.900 --> 00:16:05.930 align:center And the end effect is that really my own course 00:16:05.930 --> 00:16:07.045 align:center policies bind me. 00:16:07.045 --> 00:16:08.670 align:center They really restrict my own creativity. 00:16:08.670 --> 00:16:11.850 align:center They restrict what I feel like I can do to support students 00:16:11.850 --> 00:16:14.697 align:center because I'm just constantly feeling like I have to be fair. 00:16:14.697 --> 00:16:17.030 align:center But at the same time, I really want to support students. 00:16:17.030 --> 00:16:21.020 align:center And that puts me in a difficult situation. 00:16:21.020 --> 00:16:23.300 align:center And so what personally got me started on this path 00:16:23.300 --> 00:16:25.200 align:center was a desire to right these wrongs. 00:16:25.200 --> 00:16:28.040 align:center And just like the story Robert shared about these grading 00:16:28.040 --> 00:16:31.280 align:center policies trapping him in a box, in my first quarter teaching 00:16:31.280 --> 00:16:34.430 align:center at UW here, I also accused an embarrassingly large number 00:16:34.430 --> 00:16:36.207 align:center of my students for academic misconduct. 00:16:36.207 --> 00:16:37.790 align:center And I think there's a lot of questions 00:16:37.790 --> 00:16:39.600 align:center that I have about my own actions, 00:16:39.600 --> 00:16:41.795 align:center about the things that I've done to students 00:16:41.795 --> 00:16:44.170 align:center and the relationships that I've had that I'm honestly not 00:16:44.170 --> 00:16:44.960 align:center very proud of. 00:16:44.960 --> 00:16:47.530 align:center I'm very ashamed of some of these things that I've done. 00:16:47.530 --> 00:16:49.510 align:center But all of this got me thinking that, 00:16:49.510 --> 00:16:50.960 align:center could we change the structures? 00:16:50.960 --> 00:16:52.760 align:center Can we change the rules of the game 00:16:52.760 --> 00:16:55.640 align:center so that we can actually avoid things like academic misconduct, 00:16:55.640 --> 00:16:58.810 align:center that we can avoid issues like, hey, Dwight, can 00:16:58.810 --> 00:17:01.570 align:center I offer this revision opportunity or this extension 00:17:01.570 --> 00:17:04.270 align:center to someone if that means offering 00:17:04.270 --> 00:17:05.630 align:center that opportunity to everyone? 00:17:05.630 --> 00:17:10.368 align:center And that's what got me started on alternative grading here. 00:17:10.368 --> 00:17:12.160 align:center So alternative grading, I think, can really 00:17:12.160 --> 00:17:15.130 align:center help us design systems that align grading practices 00:17:15.130 --> 00:17:16.930 align:center with our own learning values. 00:17:16.930 --> 00:17:19.119 align:center And broadly to define that term, it's 00:17:19.119 --> 00:17:21.520 align:center a broad umbrella term referring to grading practices 00:17:21.520 --> 00:17:23.260 align:center that recognize and value the learning 00:17:23.260 --> 00:17:25.300 align:center that students achieve over time. 00:17:25.300 --> 00:17:27.640 align:center I'll quote Drew Lewis here, who has these three bullet 00:17:27.640 --> 00:17:30.263 align:center points for a shared philosophy among 00:17:30.263 --> 00:17:32.680 align:center the many different alternative grading schemes people have 00:17:32.680 --> 00:17:35.080 align:center invented. 00:17:35.080 --> 00:17:36.910 align:center Students should have multiple opportunities 00:17:36.910 --> 00:17:38.560 align:center to demonstrate proficiency. 00:17:38.560 --> 00:17:40.330 align:center Grades should reflect the proficiency 00:17:40.330 --> 00:17:42.500 align:center that students demonstrate by the end 00:17:42.500 --> 00:17:44.870 align:center and that grades and points are de-emphasized in favor 00:17:44.870 --> 00:17:46.930 align:center of rich, deep feedback. 00:17:46.930 --> 00:17:49.430 align:center And so there are many different types of alternative grading 00:17:49.430 --> 00:17:50.870 align:center systems you might have heard of. 00:17:50.870 --> 00:17:52.860 align:center Maybe you've heard of a specifications grading, 00:17:52.860 --> 00:17:54.530 align:center standards grading, ungrading. 00:17:54.530 --> 00:17:56.930 align:center These are all different ideas that share 00:17:56.930 --> 00:18:00.110 align:center many of these elements that Drew has pointed out. 00:18:00.110 --> 00:18:03.510 align:center But rather than try to explain each of these one by one, 00:18:03.510 --> 00:18:06.200 align:center I wanted to start by how changes to policies 00:18:06.200 --> 00:18:08.210 align:center help me produce more equitable grades without, 00:18:08.210 --> 00:18:11.210 align:center say, throwing out my entire grading system. 00:18:11.210 --> 00:18:13.410 align:center I think there are even small things we can do. 00:18:13.410 --> 00:18:16.310 align:center So one small thing that I feel like, if any of us 00:18:16.310 --> 00:18:18.740 align:center are using final exams, an easy one to do 00:18:18.740 --> 00:18:21.800 align:center is this idea of final exam clobbering. 00:18:21.800 --> 00:18:24.360 align:center In STEM courses, like the ones that I tend to teach, 00:18:24.360 --> 00:18:25.820 align:center midterms and finals are oftentimes 00:18:25.820 --> 00:18:28.040 align:center used as this form of summative assessment of student 00:18:28.040 --> 00:18:29.630 align:center achievement and proficiency. 00:18:29.630 --> 00:18:31.790 align:center And in the past, it was always difficult for me 00:18:31.790 --> 00:18:34.325 align:center to explain to students who did poorly on a midterm exam 00:18:34.325 --> 00:18:36.200 align:center that they could demonstrate their improvement 00:18:36.200 --> 00:18:38.360 align:center on the final exam because the typical way 00:18:38.360 --> 00:18:40.830 align:center that, if you have a points-based system, 00:18:40.830 --> 00:18:42.840 align:center you've already established some amount of points 00:18:42.840 --> 00:18:43.810 align:center for the midterm. 00:18:43.810 --> 00:18:45.900 align:center And that whatever you've lost in that midterm 00:18:45.900 --> 00:18:47.740 align:center is lost forever on your record. 00:18:47.740 --> 00:18:49.740 align:center There's no way to make it up, right? 00:18:49.740 --> 00:18:52.590 align:center But rather it becomes really this grading deficit 00:18:52.590 --> 00:18:54.210 align:center for students. 00:18:54.210 --> 00:18:57.855 align:center So in my mind, I think, to align these grading 00:18:57.855 --> 00:19:00.480 align:center policies, to change my grading policy so that it could actually 00:19:00.480 --> 00:19:02.350 align:center capture students learning over time, 00:19:02.350 --> 00:19:05.430 align:center maybe you could actually replace that midterm score 00:19:05.430 --> 00:19:08.820 align:center with some corresponding portion of the final exam. 00:19:08.820 --> 00:19:10.495 align:center So we call that final exam clobbering. 00:19:10.495 --> 00:19:12.870 align:center So for those of you who missed an exam, have a bad night, 00:19:12.870 --> 00:19:15.130 align:center or make major improvements over the semester, 00:19:15.130 --> 00:19:16.830 align:center the exam clobbering policy gives you 00:19:16.830 --> 00:19:18.450 align:center a chance to use your final exam score 00:19:18.450 --> 00:19:20.658 align:center to make up some of the points on your midterm scores. 00:19:20.658 --> 00:19:22.617 align:center You don't have to allow them to make it all up, 00:19:22.617 --> 00:19:24.220 align:center but maybe you can make up some amount. 00:19:24.220 --> 00:19:27.550 align:center The clobber policy will only be applied if it helps your score. 00:19:27.550 --> 00:19:29.872 align:center For example, if you score the median on both midterms 00:19:29.872 --> 00:19:32.080 align:center but then have a bad day and do terribly in the final, 00:19:32.080 --> 00:19:34.325 align:center we will not change your midterm scores. 00:19:34.325 --> 00:19:35.700 align:center So that way it's still benefiting 00:19:35.700 --> 00:19:38.325 align:center students who are really learning and demonstrating what they're 00:19:38.325 --> 00:19:40.720 align:center learning during the term. 00:19:40.720 --> 00:19:42.940 align:center The clobber policy can only be used to make up 00:19:42.940 --> 00:19:44.000 align:center points on the midterms. 00:19:44.000 --> 00:19:45.650 align:center For example, if you score well in the midterms, 00:19:45.650 --> 00:19:47.900 align:center that cannot be used to make up points on the final exam. 00:19:47.900 --> 00:19:49.300 align:center So we are still expecting that they 00:19:49.300 --> 00:19:51.217 align:center are able to demonstrate all the skills that we 00:19:51.217 --> 00:19:54.310 align:center expect by the end of the quarter in that typical final exam. 00:19:54.310 --> 00:19:56.320 align:center And you can do all of this without even changing 00:19:56.320 --> 00:19:58.510 align:center how you're doing traditional points-based grading 00:19:58.510 --> 00:20:00.350 align:center or whatever grading system you're using. 00:20:00.350 --> 00:20:03.820 align:center There are ways that you can use future or later assessments 00:20:03.820 --> 00:20:06.140 align:center of student proficiency and think about, 00:20:06.140 --> 00:20:09.933 align:center can I use that and apply it back to earlier assessments that 00:20:09.933 --> 00:20:12.100 align:center may not be accurate representations of what students 00:20:12.100 --> 00:20:13.570 align:center know by the end of the term? 00:20:13.570 --> 00:20:15.850 align:center Now, that's still really a conversation and reflection 00:20:15.850 --> 00:20:18.310 align:center for yourself about like, is this an appropriate assessment 00:20:18.310 --> 00:20:19.430 align:center that I can map back? 00:20:19.430 --> 00:20:21.440 align:center Are the concepts mapped back effectively? 00:20:21.440 --> 00:20:23.240 align:center Am I asking the same type of questions? 00:20:23.240 --> 00:20:24.920 align:center There's still a lot of nuances in that, 00:20:24.920 --> 00:20:27.097 align:center but I wanted to raise this question that I think, 00:20:27.097 --> 00:20:29.680 align:center even though maybe there are all these kind of really ambitious 00:20:29.680 --> 00:20:32.170 align:center ways you can change your grading policy, like the examples 00:20:32.170 --> 00:20:34.190 align:center we saw with narrative evaluations, even, 00:20:34.190 --> 00:20:37.238 align:center but I think there are even these small ways where we can look at, 00:20:37.238 --> 00:20:39.780 align:center hey, I actually want my grades to represent what students can 00:20:39.780 --> 00:20:42.300 align:center do at the end of the term, that surprisingly don't 00:20:42.300 --> 00:20:43.960 align:center take too much more work to do. 00:20:43.960 --> 00:20:48.185 align:center This is just changing your grading spreadsheet, basically. 00:20:48.185 --> 00:20:50.310 align:center Now I want to turn my attention to something that's 00:20:50.310 --> 00:20:51.810 align:center more specific in some of the courses 00:20:51.810 --> 00:20:54.280 align:center that I've taught and supported in development. 00:20:54.280 --> 00:20:57.330 align:center So in the introductory courses I teach, we oftentimes 00:20:57.330 --> 00:21:00.240 align:center have these frequent weekly or multiweek programming 00:21:00.240 --> 00:21:04.320 align:center assignments that apply concepts in more authentic settings. 00:21:04.320 --> 00:21:05.715 align:center So historically, these were like, 00:21:05.715 --> 00:21:10.305 align:center we have a TA spend a lot of time reviewing these assignments. 00:21:10.305 --> 00:21:12.180 align:center And the students would oftentimes really want 00:21:12.180 --> 00:21:13.990 align:center to know why they lost points. 00:21:13.990 --> 00:21:16.930 align:center And just like as an exam, if you lose points on an assignment, 00:21:16.930 --> 00:21:19.320 align:center it's not so easy to recover those points when 00:21:19.320 --> 00:21:21.758 align:center it comes to final grade, right? 00:21:21.758 --> 00:21:23.550 align:center And it came to a point that really students 00:21:23.550 --> 00:21:27.845 align:center who entered this course with credit would oftentimes-- 00:21:27.845 --> 00:21:29.970 align:center with enough credit to skip our introductory courses 00:21:29.970 --> 00:21:32.478 align:center would still go back and retake it, retake those courses 00:21:32.478 --> 00:21:34.020 align:center that they technically had credit for, 00:21:34.020 --> 00:21:36.720 align:center just so they could get practice with understanding our grading 00:21:36.720 --> 00:21:41.630 align:center systems and understanding, how did we want to evaluate them? 00:21:41.630 --> 00:21:43.880 align:center And that just felt like a really difficult environment 00:21:43.880 --> 00:21:45.220 align:center because some of our introductory courses 00:21:45.220 --> 00:21:46.595 align:center were really intended for students 00:21:46.595 --> 00:21:49.300 align:center with no prior programming experience. 00:21:49.300 --> 00:21:51.250 align:center So to address this, we tried to make it 00:21:51.250 --> 00:21:54.490 align:center so that the following courses, the courses that most 00:21:54.490 --> 00:21:56.780 align:center students are taking in are programming sequence, 00:21:56.780 --> 00:22:00.223 align:center we give them opportunities for revision and resubmission. 00:22:00.223 --> 00:22:02.140 align:center Students are encouraged to revise and resubmit 00:22:02.140 --> 00:22:03.440 align:center to address feedback. 00:22:03.440 --> 00:22:06.070 align:center And so this not only helps students 00:22:06.070 --> 00:22:08.660 align:center provide a grade-based incentive to improve their work. 00:22:08.660 --> 00:22:11.530 align:center But it also turned this the manual labor 00:22:11.530 --> 00:22:13.960 align:center of grading into feedback that students were incentivized 00:22:13.960 --> 00:22:16.120 align:center to learn from, rather than just see the point value 00:22:16.120 --> 00:22:18.110 align:center and be like, well, that's my points. 00:22:18.110 --> 00:22:19.720 align:center I can't change that, right? 00:22:19.720 --> 00:22:21.958 align:center So the specific policy is listed here. 00:22:21.958 --> 00:22:23.500 align:center And we talk about both the motivation 00:22:23.500 --> 00:22:25.780 align:center for the policy to students in the syllabus 00:22:25.780 --> 00:22:27.700 align:center by first saying like, learning from mistakes 00:22:27.700 --> 00:22:29.750 align:center is an important part of mastering any skill, 00:22:29.750 --> 00:22:31.220 align:center especially for novices. 00:22:31.220 --> 00:22:33.580 align:center To enable this, you are allowed to revise and resubmit 00:22:33.580 --> 00:22:35.080 align:center your work on programming assignments 00:22:35.080 --> 00:22:37.410 align:center and creative projects to demonstrate improved mastery 00:22:37.410 --> 00:22:38.678 align:center after your initial submission. 00:22:38.678 --> 00:22:40.720 align:center Resubmissions are subject to the following rules, 00:22:40.720 --> 00:22:43.000 align:center and then there are some practical rules around that. 00:22:43.000 --> 00:22:45.622 align:center So for example, there will be eight opportunities for you 00:22:45.622 --> 00:22:47.580 align:center to make a resubmission after receiving feedback 00:22:47.580 --> 00:22:51.010 align:center on your work, which is basically corresponding to one every week. 00:22:51.010 --> 00:22:53.467 align:center So we have a general cadence for how much 00:22:53.467 --> 00:22:55.800 align:center labor that the TAs are willing to put in because the TAs 00:22:55.800 --> 00:22:58.260 align:center are paid, and they're limited in the number of hours 00:22:58.260 --> 00:23:00.443 align:center they can offer to students. 00:23:00.443 --> 00:23:02.110 align:center And as well as some other general rules, 00:23:02.110 --> 00:23:03.985 align:center like you have to first get initial submission 00:23:03.985 --> 00:23:07.830 align:center feedback before you can get your resubmission. 00:23:07.830 --> 00:23:09.330 align:center And there are also time limits, too, 00:23:09.330 --> 00:23:12.360 align:center that an assignment may only be resubmitted in the three 00:23:12.360 --> 00:23:14.250 align:center resubmission cycles or three weeks 00:23:14.250 --> 00:23:17.080 align:center after feedback for the assignment has been released. 00:23:17.080 --> 00:23:19.590 align:center So that way the TAs don't have to keep in mind that there 00:23:19.590 --> 00:23:21.120 align:center are all these assignments that are building up 00:23:21.120 --> 00:23:22.830 align:center and they have to keep like seven or eight assignments 00:23:22.830 --> 00:23:23.500 align:center in their head. 00:23:23.500 --> 00:23:25.042 align:center They only have to keep the three that 00:23:25.042 --> 00:23:27.720 align:center are most recent in their head. 00:23:27.720 --> 00:23:30.420 align:center So all of that, you can see these restrictions are 00:23:30.420 --> 00:23:32.580 align:center things that I think we are motivating 00:23:32.580 --> 00:23:33.933 align:center as practical considerations. 00:23:33.933 --> 00:23:35.850 align:center But you can also possibly see that maybe there 00:23:35.850 --> 00:23:38.300 align:center are some learning-based motivations for this, 00:23:38.300 --> 00:23:41.480 align:center too, that maybe having spaced out opportunities 00:23:41.480 --> 00:23:43.940 align:center can be useful, even though maybe these might 00:23:43.940 --> 00:23:47.840 align:center run into the wall of restrictions in the end as well. 00:23:47.840 --> 00:23:51.020 align:center Now, in practice, though, since there are very limited number 00:23:51.020 --> 00:23:53.030 align:center of weeks in the quarter, it is very important 00:23:53.030 --> 00:23:55.070 align:center that you as a student stay on top of your work 00:23:55.070 --> 00:23:56.973 align:center as much as possible. 00:23:56.973 --> 00:23:58.640 align:center Our resubmission policy is designed such 00:23:58.640 --> 00:24:00.560 align:center that you should only be using a single resubmission 00:24:00.560 --> 00:24:02.670 align:center on any particular assignment throughout the quarter. 00:24:02.670 --> 00:24:04.170 align:center So there is a little bit of pressure 00:24:04.170 --> 00:24:06.140 align:center for students to be turning in their best work 00:24:06.140 --> 00:24:08.400 align:center as much as they can on the time that it's due 00:24:08.400 --> 00:24:10.460 align:center because the TAs only have a fixed amount of time 00:24:10.460 --> 00:24:11.960 align:center per week to grade. 00:24:11.960 --> 00:24:13.810 align:center And then using that feedback, we're 00:24:13.810 --> 00:24:15.560 align:center giving students the opportunity to improve 00:24:15.560 --> 00:24:17.445 align:center what they've submitted. 00:24:17.445 --> 00:24:19.820 align:center So all of this comes together to make the policy actually 00:24:19.820 --> 00:24:22.350 align:center reasonable in these large courses that we're working with. 00:24:22.350 --> 00:24:24.240 align:center But I think even if you're teaching a smaller course, 00:24:24.240 --> 00:24:25.823 align:center you might wonder, maybe there are ways 00:24:25.823 --> 00:24:27.450 align:center that I could adapt the system. 00:24:27.450 --> 00:24:29.567 align:center Maybe you could say, hey, instead 00:24:29.567 --> 00:24:31.650 align:center of having students resubmit the entire assignment, 00:24:31.650 --> 00:24:34.220 align:center maybe there are particular key points I want them to address, 00:24:34.220 --> 00:24:36.603 align:center maybe two or three questions I want students to answer. 00:24:36.603 --> 00:24:38.520 align:center And by answering those two or three questions, 00:24:38.520 --> 00:24:40.410 align:center maybe students can demonstrate improved learning. 00:24:40.410 --> 00:24:41.952 align:center And it doesn't take too much time out 00:24:41.952 --> 00:24:43.355 align:center of my sight to do that as well. 00:24:43.355 --> 00:24:45.980 align:center So I think there are different ways you can scale the system up 00:24:45.980 --> 00:24:48.360 align:center in terms of work or scale it down in terms of work, 00:24:48.360 --> 00:24:53.150 align:center based on what you have available to you. 00:24:53.150 --> 00:24:56.852 align:center By focusing on this more limited ESN 00:24:56.852 --> 00:24:59.060 align:center scale, so the way we actually grade students work is, 00:24:59.060 --> 00:25:01.760 align:center instead of using points, we use this table on the right that 00:25:01.760 --> 00:25:04.340 align:center shows, for the four dimensions of quality, 00:25:04.340 --> 00:25:07.800 align:center we care about students code behavior, code concepts, 00:25:07.800 --> 00:25:09.810 align:center code quality, and code testing. 00:25:09.810 --> 00:25:11.660 align:center For those four dimensions, we'll rate them 00:25:11.660 --> 00:25:15.170 align:center on a three-point scale, excellent, satisfactory, 00:25:15.170 --> 00:25:17.630 align:center or not yet, as an example. 00:25:17.630 --> 00:25:20.670 align:center This helps us communicate what area students should improve. 00:25:20.670 --> 00:25:24.660 align:center So we're no longer tied to, oh, it's 15 out of 16 points. 00:25:24.660 --> 00:25:26.793 align:center And you have to, as a student, figure out, 00:25:26.793 --> 00:25:28.460 align:center what is that one point that I'm missing? 00:25:28.460 --> 00:25:30.477 align:center Here we're able to say, hey, these 00:25:30.477 --> 00:25:32.060 align:center are the particular areas that we think 00:25:32.060 --> 00:25:33.373 align:center you could improve the best on. 00:25:33.373 --> 00:25:35.040 align:center And then the feedback that we provide in 00:25:35.040 --> 00:25:36.692 align:center that assignment will help identify, 00:25:36.692 --> 00:25:37.900 align:center hey, you should work on this. 00:25:37.900 --> 00:25:38.890 align:center You should work on this. 00:25:38.890 --> 00:25:40.682 align:center And once you've addressed all those points, 00:25:40.682 --> 00:25:42.840 align:center then I think you'll be good to go. 00:25:42.840 --> 00:25:45.773 align:center So I think as we're moving more toward revision, 00:25:45.773 --> 00:25:47.940 align:center then that also puts a little bit more pressure on us 00:25:47.940 --> 00:25:49.740 align:center as instructors to provide feedback that's 00:25:49.740 --> 00:25:51.500 align:center more directly helpful for students 00:25:51.500 --> 00:25:53.000 align:center to address those points of revision. 00:25:57.750 --> 00:26:00.270 align:center Finally, I'll talk a little bit about specifications grading 00:26:00.270 --> 00:26:02.890 align:center and then switch over to a different topic. 00:26:02.890 --> 00:26:06.550 align:center So if we have all these ESN grades that I've suggested, 00:26:06.550 --> 00:26:09.390 align:center so instead of having point values for our assignments, 00:26:09.390 --> 00:26:10.830 align:center because we're focusing on feedback 00:26:10.830 --> 00:26:13.260 align:center and we want the grading for the assignment 00:26:13.260 --> 00:26:16.440 align:center to reflect that feedback, we've been using that ESN scale, 00:26:16.440 --> 00:26:18.760 align:center the way that we assign final grades in the course 00:26:18.760 --> 00:26:20.980 align:center also relies on that ESN scale. 00:26:20.980 --> 00:26:24.540 align:center So instead of saying, hey, a 3.5 is getting 90% of the course 00:26:24.540 --> 00:26:27.900 align:center overall, we're instead looking at how many S's and how many 00:26:27.900 --> 00:26:29.110 align:center E's you've received. 00:26:29.110 --> 00:26:31.380 align:center So how many satisfactory evaluations 00:26:31.380 --> 00:26:36.680 align:center and exemplary evaluations have you received from an instructor? 00:26:36.680 --> 00:26:38.443 align:center We call this specifications grading, 00:26:38.443 --> 00:26:39.860 align:center or bundle-based grading, depending 00:26:39.860 --> 00:26:41.027 align:center on what you want to call it. 00:26:41.027 --> 00:26:43.650 align:center But basically, you can say that, hey, in the grading system, 00:26:43.650 --> 00:26:46.160 align:center we can have a minimum grade of 3.5 correspond 00:26:46.160 --> 00:26:48.840 align:center to a certain number of S's or higher 00:26:48.840 --> 00:26:50.940 align:center and a certain number of E's or higher. 00:26:50.940 --> 00:26:52.670 align:center So by the end of the term, students 00:26:52.670 --> 00:26:56.090 align:center should have demonstrated that amount of S's or E's to receive 00:26:56.090 --> 00:26:57.740 align:center a certain final grade. 00:26:57.740 --> 00:26:59.790 align:center So we are still, as instructors here at UW, 00:26:59.790 --> 00:27:02.430 align:center constrained by the 0.1 increment grading system. 00:27:02.430 --> 00:27:04.700 align:center But we can find ways to provide students 00:27:04.700 --> 00:27:07.652 align:center the flexibility and benefits of revisions, 00:27:07.652 --> 00:27:09.110 align:center resubmitting their work, improving, 00:27:09.110 --> 00:27:12.110 align:center and showing that demonstrated improvement in their grades 00:27:12.110 --> 00:27:15.890 align:center without necessarily throwing out the entire reality of 0.1 grade 00:27:15.890 --> 00:27:19.040 align:center increments being the system that we work in. 00:27:19.040 --> 00:27:20.870 align:center So to quote the syllabus a little bit 00:27:20.870 --> 00:27:23.308 align:center here, "Minimum requirements for each grade. 00:27:23.308 --> 00:27:25.850 align:center Note that all requirements for a particular grade must be met 00:27:25.850 --> 00:27:28.760 align:center to guarantee that minimum, though failing to do so does not 00:27:28.760 --> 00:27:30.330 align:center mean that grade cannot be earned." 00:27:30.330 --> 00:27:32.690 align:center This is always a very confusing sentence to students, 00:27:32.690 --> 00:27:34.330 align:center but basically it means that while these 00:27:34.330 --> 00:27:36.460 align:center are minimum guarantees, if you have 00:27:36.460 --> 00:27:38.590 align:center some more unusual combination, you may still 00:27:38.590 --> 00:27:41.110 align:center get more than a 3.5, even if you don't technically 00:27:41.110 --> 00:27:43.185 align:center meet the minimum requirements for it per se. 00:27:46.900 --> 00:27:48.710 align:center So finally, to put all this together, 00:27:48.710 --> 00:27:50.600 align:center I've talked about a couple of example grading systems. 00:27:50.600 --> 00:27:52.933 align:center I want to remind us, what's the big picture of all this? 00:27:52.933 --> 00:27:56.500 align:center So I want to point to Robert Talbert and David Clark's 00:27:56.500 --> 00:27:58.900 align:center summary of the philosophy of alternative grading here 00:27:58.900 --> 00:28:00.650 align:center with these four pillars. 00:28:00.650 --> 00:28:02.540 align:center They really like this symbol here, 00:28:02.540 --> 00:28:04.537 align:center so I'll explain this in a little bit. 00:28:04.537 --> 00:28:06.370 align:center These pillars really represent the questions 00:28:06.370 --> 00:28:08.787 align:center you can ask yourself when you are considering your grading 00:28:08.787 --> 00:28:09.470 align:center systems. 00:28:09.470 --> 00:28:13.280 align:center Does your grading system have clearly defined standards? 00:28:13.280 --> 00:28:15.710 align:center Does your grading system have helpful feedback? 00:28:15.710 --> 00:28:17.230 align:center Does your grading system have marks 00:28:17.230 --> 00:28:21.220 align:center that indicate progress and/or re-attempt without penalty? 00:28:21.220 --> 00:28:22.760 align:center If you're able to hit all of those, 00:28:22.760 --> 00:28:24.385 align:center I think you're probably in a good place 00:28:24.385 --> 00:28:27.190 align:center in supporting students to demonstrate what they learned 00:28:27.190 --> 00:28:29.490 align:center by the end of the term and have their grades reflect 00:28:29.490 --> 00:28:30.615 align:center that demonstrated learning. 00:28:33.260 --> 00:28:35.430 align:center So with clearly defined standards, for example, 00:28:35.430 --> 00:28:37.847 align:center student work is evaluated using content standards that 00:28:37.847 --> 00:28:39.680 align:center are appropriate for the context and indicate 00:28:39.680 --> 00:28:41.372 align:center what is acceptable evidence of learning. 00:28:41.372 --> 00:28:43.580 align:center And I want to focus on that clearly defined standards 00:28:43.580 --> 00:28:45.510 align:center in particular because, for the next part, 00:28:45.510 --> 00:28:47.677 align:center I actually want to talk about some of the subtleties 00:28:47.677 --> 00:28:50.000 align:center and nuances of how you can get this to work well 00:28:50.000 --> 00:28:53.780 align:center with students because I think one of the clear questions 00:28:53.780 --> 00:28:56.510 align:center that I oftentimes get from new alternative graders 00:28:56.510 --> 00:28:58.612 align:center is whether students will like this change, 00:28:58.612 --> 00:29:00.320 align:center whether they'll feel comfortable with it. 00:29:00.320 --> 00:29:02.362 align:center And I think whether they feel comfortable with it 00:29:02.362 --> 00:29:05.960 align:center depends on how you actually implement the grading system. 00:29:05.960 --> 00:29:08.580 align:center So first I want to focus on details matter. 00:29:08.580 --> 00:29:11.420 align:center So if we try to apply those four questions that I just 00:29:11.420 --> 00:29:15.320 align:center suggested to this grading system, 00:29:15.320 --> 00:29:16.650 align:center what would that look like? 00:29:16.650 --> 00:29:18.667 align:center Well, I think there's a lot of information here. 00:29:18.667 --> 00:29:20.750 align:center So you as a student, you have to keep track of all 00:29:20.750 --> 00:29:23.480 align:center your E's, S's, and N's. 00:29:23.480 --> 00:29:25.998 align:center And if you're aiming for a certain final grade 00:29:25.998 --> 00:29:28.290 align:center in the course, you still have a pretty high bar to hit. 00:29:28.290 --> 00:29:31.870 align:center You still have to demonstrate that you have done 27, 00:29:31.870 --> 00:29:34.450 align:center 30 S's and E's. 00:29:34.450 --> 00:29:36.670 align:center And at UW, at my institution right now, 00:29:36.670 --> 00:29:38.688 align:center University of Washington, we're oftentimes 00:29:38.688 --> 00:29:40.980 align:center facing students who want to know with a high relatively 00:29:40.980 --> 00:29:43.320 align:center good degree of certainty that their grade will be this 00:29:43.320 --> 00:29:45.507 align:center or that this is how they're doing so far. 00:29:45.507 --> 00:29:47.590 align:center And it can be a little disconcerting for students, 00:29:47.590 --> 00:29:49.170 align:center whether they feel like they can do it 00:29:49.170 --> 00:29:51.503 align:center or whether they can feel like they can achieve the grade 00:29:51.503 --> 00:29:53.250 align:center that they're looking for. 00:29:53.250 --> 00:29:57.240 align:center So I think that there are some risks to our approaches here. 00:29:57.240 --> 00:30:00.240 align:center So using these four pillars, can we evaluate our specifications 00:30:00.240 --> 00:30:02.160 align:center grading here? 00:30:02.160 --> 00:30:04.450 align:center So although I feel like these requirements-- 00:30:04.450 --> 00:30:06.870 align:center and if we actually zoom in to this rubric, 00:30:06.870 --> 00:30:07.912 align:center it's not too complicated. 00:30:07.912 --> 00:30:09.412 align:center But I think there's a lot of nuance. 00:30:09.412 --> 00:30:11.700 align:center So if you actually read into some of our rubrics 00:30:11.700 --> 00:30:14.230 align:center and some of the details that we provide to students, 00:30:14.230 --> 00:30:16.630 align:center one of the dimensions-- so if you actually see here, 00:30:16.630 --> 00:30:19.630 align:center I'm just pointing to the quality dimension. 00:30:19.630 --> 00:30:21.700 align:center Just the quality dimension alone, 00:30:21.700 --> 00:30:24.180 align:center there's actually a lot of subpoints, sublearning goals 00:30:24.180 --> 00:30:25.810 align:center that we want students to achieve. 00:30:25.810 --> 00:30:28.560 align:center We want their header comments to be present on all their code 00:30:28.560 --> 00:30:29.895 align:center classes and methods. 00:30:29.895 --> 00:30:31.270 align:center We want all their header comments 00:30:31.270 --> 00:30:33.700 align:center to be concise, meaningful, and include 00:30:33.700 --> 00:30:35.102 align:center all relevant information. 00:30:35.102 --> 00:30:37.060 align:center We want their names, comments, and line lengths 00:30:37.060 --> 00:30:39.015 align:center to make code more readable and maintainable. 00:30:39.015 --> 00:30:40.390 align:center And so these are all requirements 00:30:40.390 --> 00:30:43.690 align:center that as experts in the field would like our students 00:30:43.690 --> 00:30:46.690 align:center to be able to demonstrate in terms of just code quality. 00:30:46.690 --> 00:30:49.580 align:center But I think when it gets so complicated like this, 00:30:49.580 --> 00:30:52.000 align:center it can really start to make it hard for students 00:30:52.000 --> 00:30:54.783 align:center to see that this is a clearly defined standard. 00:30:54.783 --> 00:30:56.950 align:center It may be clear to experts but possibly not as clear 00:30:56.950 --> 00:30:57.573 align:center to students. 00:30:57.573 --> 00:30:59.740 align:center So I think this is one potential point of contention 00:30:59.740 --> 00:31:01.630 align:center that students might face. 00:31:01.630 --> 00:31:03.860 align:center And in fact, if you actually go talk to Eman, 00:31:03.860 --> 00:31:05.277 align:center this is actually one of the things 00:31:05.277 --> 00:31:08.140 align:center that she surfaced in her interviews with students. 00:31:08.140 --> 00:31:11.093 align:center So quoting one of the students that Eman interviewed, "Yeah, 00:31:11.093 --> 00:31:13.010 align:center my favorite thing was definitely resubmissions 00:31:13.010 --> 00:31:16.270 align:center because I could actively see the mistake that I made or error, 00:31:16.270 --> 00:31:20.638 align:center like what I got my points were just reduced on and then fix it. 00:31:20.638 --> 00:31:22.180 align:center Seeing how that translated definitely 00:31:22.180 --> 00:31:24.320 align:center helped me feel more reassured and less panicked. 00:31:24.320 --> 00:31:26.440 align:center For the final and midterm, though, 00:31:26.440 --> 00:31:29.000 align:center literally my hand was shaking so bad because I was telling 00:31:29.000 --> 00:31:31.292 align:center myself, like, my grade literally depends on these tests 00:31:31.292 --> 00:31:33.650 align:center because of how much I used the resubmissions 00:31:33.650 --> 00:31:35.168 align:center on the assignments." 00:31:35.168 --> 00:31:36.710 align:center So there are complications between we 00:31:36.710 --> 00:31:39.150 align:center offer resubmissions for some things but not others 00:31:39.150 --> 00:31:41.000 align:center and to the point I was just making about, 00:31:41.000 --> 00:31:42.513 align:center clearly defined standards. 00:31:42.513 --> 00:31:44.930 align:center Another thing that really annoyed people is that sometimes 00:31:44.930 --> 00:31:48.110 align:center they would let you do a regrade, or resubmission, so in that way, 00:31:48.110 --> 00:31:49.568 align:center it made it a little bit more fair. 00:31:49.568 --> 00:31:51.860 align:center But then on the other hand, something that would happen 00:31:51.860 --> 00:31:53.585 align:center is they mark you off for one thing 00:31:53.585 --> 00:31:54.710 align:center on the original submission. 00:31:54.710 --> 00:31:55.970 align:center And then on your resubmission, they'll 00:31:55.970 --> 00:31:57.345 align:center fix that one thing in your grade, 00:31:57.345 --> 00:31:59.595 align:center but then they have to ding you for something else they 00:31:59.595 --> 00:32:00.810 align:center didn't even mention before. 00:32:00.810 --> 00:32:02.930 align:center So I think that also frustrated some people 00:32:02.930 --> 00:32:05.660 align:center because it felt like it was thrown at them last minute. 00:32:05.660 --> 00:32:07.890 align:center So I think getting the details right here, 00:32:07.890 --> 00:32:10.350 align:center knowing how you're communicating that feedback to students, 00:32:10.350 --> 00:32:13.470 align:center making sure that it feels like, from the student's perspective-- 00:32:13.470 --> 00:32:15.380 align:center and again, these are mostly UW students who 00:32:15.380 --> 00:32:16.440 align:center are very grade conscious. 00:32:16.440 --> 00:32:18.170 align:center They're like, I want to get all the points-- 00:32:18.170 --> 00:32:19.587 align:center because that's their mentality, we 00:32:19.587 --> 00:32:21.210 align:center want to be able to provide support, 00:32:21.210 --> 00:32:23.480 align:center understanding that that's their position, how they're 00:32:23.480 --> 00:32:25.730 align:center approaching that feedback and using these resubmission 00:32:25.730 --> 00:32:26.230 align:center systems. 00:32:29.220 --> 00:32:31.900 align:center So I want to point out, though, that's just only one option. 00:32:31.900 --> 00:32:33.820 align:center There are many other ways you can do things. 00:32:33.820 --> 00:32:36.210 align:center So if you're using Canvas or another learning management 00:32:36.210 --> 00:32:39.100 align:center system like it, there are other systems, 00:32:39.100 --> 00:32:40.900 align:center you can actually use to integrate progress 00:32:40.900 --> 00:32:42.733 align:center because the grading system that I showed you 00:32:42.733 --> 00:32:46.080 align:center before with the 3.5, the 3.0 table, that's 00:32:46.080 --> 00:32:48.840 align:center just giving you one example way of doing things. 00:32:48.840 --> 00:32:51.390 align:center Another way that I tend to use more often in my courses 00:32:51.390 --> 00:32:53.410 align:center is using Canvas modules. 00:32:53.410 --> 00:32:56.170 align:center And in a module, you can actually indicate, hey, 00:32:56.170 --> 00:32:59.250 align:center for example, assignment that I'll call mapping, 00:32:59.250 --> 00:33:03.090 align:center for this mapping assignment, if it's out of 12 points, 00:33:03.090 --> 00:33:04.620 align:center in Canvas, I can set the requirement 00:33:04.620 --> 00:33:07.800 align:center to be score at least 7 out of 12 points. 00:33:07.800 --> 00:33:10.602 align:center And so students can still be using these point systems. 00:33:10.602 --> 00:33:12.810 align:center So maybe if you have an existing point-graded rubric, 00:33:12.810 --> 00:33:14.950 align:center you can still use that points-graded rubric, 00:33:14.950 --> 00:33:16.140 align:center but maybe indicate that there's just 00:33:16.140 --> 00:33:17.100 align:center some of these general requirements 00:33:17.100 --> 00:33:19.710 align:center that you want students to be able to demonstrate to satisfy 00:33:19.710 --> 00:33:21.543 align:center a module requirement. 00:33:21.543 --> 00:33:23.710 align:center So then when you're doing final grades, you can say, 00:33:23.710 --> 00:33:24.780 align:center have you completed this module? 00:33:24.780 --> 00:33:26.405 align:center Or have you completed this requirement? 00:33:26.405 --> 00:33:29.030 align:center Just means for the student going back and looking at Canvas 00:33:29.030 --> 00:33:32.030 align:center and being like, did they get a check mark, a green check mark, 00:33:32.030 --> 00:33:33.660 align:center for scoring at least seven points? 00:33:33.660 --> 00:33:35.430 align:center And if you did, they're in good shape. 00:33:35.430 --> 00:33:38.840 align:center If they're not, they probably need to go back and resubmit. 00:33:38.840 --> 00:33:41.000 align:center But I think there's also a tension here, too, 00:33:41.000 --> 00:33:44.300 align:center because like I mentioned with the points emphasis, 00:33:44.300 --> 00:33:46.835 align:center this way still really emphasizes points. 00:33:46.835 --> 00:33:48.710 align:center We have to make choices about how many points 00:33:48.710 --> 00:33:50.460 align:center to assign to an assignment. 00:33:50.460 --> 00:33:51.920 align:center And from the student's perspective, 00:33:51.920 --> 00:33:53.713 align:center when they receive this Canvas notification, 00:33:53.713 --> 00:33:55.880 align:center they just look at the points, and they're like, hmm, 00:33:55.880 --> 00:33:58.648 align:center does that feel like a good point value or a bad point value? 00:33:58.648 --> 00:34:00.440 align:center And that's really, I think, a judgment call 00:34:00.440 --> 00:34:03.330 align:center that oftentimes students are using to understand, 00:34:03.330 --> 00:34:05.582 align:center am I good at this subject? 00:34:05.582 --> 00:34:07.040 align:center Even though I think as teachers, we 00:34:07.040 --> 00:34:09.498 align:center would encourage a lot of our students, all of our students, 00:34:09.498 --> 00:34:11.480 align:center I hope, really, to be pursuing that subject 00:34:11.480 --> 00:34:13.320 align:center and learning and improving over time 00:34:13.320 --> 00:34:15.739 align:center and that low points or low scoring assignments 00:34:15.739 --> 00:34:19.500 align:center aren't indicators that they aren't cut out for this subject. 00:34:19.500 --> 00:34:22.070 align:center But oftentimes they will take these point values 00:34:22.070 --> 00:34:24.949 align:center as indications of whether they're adept for it 00:34:24.949 --> 00:34:26.949 align:center or whether they are fit for this subject or not. 00:34:26.949 --> 00:34:30.630 align:center So I think that this is a possible middle ground 00:34:30.630 --> 00:34:32.429 align:center approach but one that I think you still 00:34:32.429 --> 00:34:36.870 align:center have to think through the subtleties of it. 00:34:36.870 --> 00:34:39.210 align:center Now, I also get a common questions about, 00:34:39.210 --> 00:34:43.260 align:center how do you actually implement this in Canvas in other ways? 00:34:43.260 --> 00:34:45.642 align:center In Canvas, if you would like to de-emphasize points, 00:34:45.642 --> 00:34:47.100 align:center there are some strategies that I've 00:34:47.100 --> 00:34:50.070 align:center learned from Abigail Noyce and David Largent here. 00:34:50.070 --> 00:34:52.770 align:center So what Abigail and Dave suggest is that you could actually 00:34:52.770 --> 00:34:54.870 align:center make most of your assignments one 00:34:54.870 --> 00:34:57.090 align:center point so that either students complete it 00:34:57.090 --> 00:35:00.960 align:center or didn't complete it, 1 point for complete, 0 for incomplete. 00:35:00.960 --> 00:35:03.370 align:center And then you can go through your Canvas Settings, 00:35:03.370 --> 00:35:06.510 align:center go into More Options, and you can do Hide Totals and Student 00:35:06.510 --> 00:35:07.550 align:center Grade Summary. 00:35:07.550 --> 00:35:09.300 align:center And like I mentioned, for each assignment, 00:35:09.300 --> 00:35:12.510 align:center make it 1 point and just satisfactory or revise. 00:35:12.510 --> 00:35:15.010 align:center And that's another way that you can communicate to students, 00:35:15.010 --> 00:35:16.712 align:center hey, the point values, I'm not really 00:35:16.712 --> 00:35:18.420 align:center trying to use them in a way that actually 00:35:18.420 --> 00:35:22.282 align:center indicates how good you are from a 0 to 12 or 0 to 100 scale. 00:35:22.282 --> 00:35:23.740 align:center Instead, it's just here to tell you 00:35:23.740 --> 00:35:26.690 align:center whether it looks good, thumbs up, or if you need to revise. 00:35:26.690 --> 00:35:28.690 align:center And that, I think, is really deliberate in terms 00:35:28.690 --> 00:35:31.630 align:center of how they're thinking about the way we communicate student 00:35:31.630 --> 00:35:34.430 align:center progress to students because here it's not, you failed. 00:35:34.430 --> 00:35:36.410 align:center It's not, you're in trouble. 00:35:36.410 --> 00:35:39.560 align:center It's just saying, hey, we're expecting revision from you. 00:35:39.560 --> 00:35:41.477 align:center We are expecting better work from you. 00:35:41.477 --> 00:35:43.810 align:center And we think that you can demonstrate that to us, right? 00:35:43.810 --> 00:35:45.580 align:center That it's an issue of time rather than 00:35:45.580 --> 00:35:50.650 align:center an issue of the student's capability or their ability. 00:35:50.650 --> 00:35:53.032 align:center So then once you have that, the practical side is, well, 00:35:53.032 --> 00:35:54.740 align:center how do you use it to track your progress? 00:35:54.740 --> 00:35:57.470 align:center Well, now, because they're all out of 0 or 1 points, 00:35:57.470 --> 00:35:59.920 align:center the summaries from the instructor side 00:35:59.920 --> 00:36:01.930 align:center represent how many of those assignments 00:36:01.930 --> 00:36:02.990 align:center students have completed. 00:36:02.990 --> 00:36:05.350 align:center So the student has done 4 out of 5, 4 out 00:36:05.350 --> 00:36:07.100 align:center of 5 points on the quizzes. 00:36:07.100 --> 00:36:10.450 align:center And so they've gotten 80% of the quizzes done to the satisfaction 00:36:10.450 --> 00:36:11.682 align:center of the graders. 00:36:11.682 --> 00:36:13.390 align:center So you can still use all these techniques 00:36:13.390 --> 00:36:17.110 align:center to be able to use existing learning mastery 00:36:17.110 --> 00:36:21.093 align:center learning management systems to make it so that you can track 00:36:21.093 --> 00:36:23.010 align:center student progress, and you can help communicate 00:36:23.010 --> 00:36:26.520 align:center those expectations to students so even they know what to do. 00:36:26.520 --> 00:36:30.233 align:center And you can use things like having course assignment groups. 00:36:30.233 --> 00:36:31.650 align:center You can even say like, hey, I want 00:36:31.650 --> 00:36:34.350 align:center to say drop one assignment from this group using the three dot 00:36:34.350 --> 00:36:34.990 align:center menu. 00:36:34.990 --> 00:36:37.630 align:center So lots of ways where you can provide flexibility to students, 00:36:37.630 --> 00:36:40.710 align:center even not necessarily using full revisions 00:36:40.710 --> 00:36:44.490 align:center or even using the ESN system but even using points-based systems 00:36:44.490 --> 00:36:46.470 align:center or even using your learning management system, 00:36:46.470 --> 00:36:47.345 align:center like I've shown here. 00:36:50.532 --> 00:36:51.990 align:center So the final thing I'll end us with 00:36:51.990 --> 00:36:55.050 align:center is of bringing home this idea of that it's 00:36:55.050 --> 00:36:58.020 align:center important to talk about not just how we grade but also 00:36:58.020 --> 00:36:59.170 align:center why we grade. 00:36:59.170 --> 00:37:02.190 align:center And I think that goes to this last section I've talked about 00:37:02.190 --> 00:37:05.310 align:center with subtleties here, that it's important to communicate 00:37:05.310 --> 00:37:07.720 align:center to students explicitly, affirmatively, 00:37:07.720 --> 00:37:10.380 align:center and repeatedly why we're making these changes, that we aren't 00:37:10.380 --> 00:37:11.880 align:center just changing these grading policies 00:37:11.880 --> 00:37:14.255 align:center because someone is telling us or requiring us to do it. 00:37:14.255 --> 00:37:15.630 align:center I don't think anyone is requiring 00:37:15.630 --> 00:37:17.080 align:center us to change our grading policies, 00:37:17.080 --> 00:37:18.150 align:center but I think you're here because you're 00:37:18.150 --> 00:37:20.567 align:center curious to learn what it could mean to change your grading 00:37:20.567 --> 00:37:23.060 align:center policies to better relationships with students. 00:37:23.060 --> 00:37:25.390 align:center And I think starting from that perspective, whatever 00:37:25.390 --> 00:37:27.730 align:center it means for you, whatever drives you to improve 00:37:27.730 --> 00:37:30.520 align:center your practice, and being honest and clear and communicative 00:37:30.520 --> 00:37:33.190 align:center about that with students is the first step toward making that 00:37:33.190 --> 00:37:35.740 align:center better, to, really, I think having more honest conversations 00:37:35.740 --> 00:37:37.428 align:center with students in general, that we're 00:37:37.428 --> 00:37:39.220 align:center changing our grading policies because we're 00:37:39.220 --> 00:37:42.020 align:center working toward a better student experience in the future. 00:37:42.020 --> 00:37:43.437 align:center And I think you can even be honest 00:37:43.437 --> 00:37:45.853 align:center that it's an experiment, that you're trying something out, 00:37:45.853 --> 00:37:48.250 align:center and that we can have a dialogue about how it goes halfway 00:37:48.250 --> 00:37:50.360 align:center through the quarter and see if we're happy with it 00:37:50.360 --> 00:37:52.485 align:center or if we're not happy with it and what parts we can 00:37:52.485 --> 00:37:53.750 align:center try to change to improve it. 00:37:53.750 --> 00:37:55.330 align:center I think having that openness, having 00:37:55.330 --> 00:37:57.540 align:center that opportunity and dialogue with students 00:37:57.540 --> 00:37:59.290 align:center can really put you in a place where you're 00:37:59.290 --> 00:38:01.665 align:center able to listen to feedback, where students are giving you 00:38:01.665 --> 00:38:04.430 align:center more grace, and you're also giving yourself some grace 00:38:04.430 --> 00:38:06.350 align:center to be open to some potential for failure 00:38:06.350 --> 00:38:08.080 align:center because I think a lot of this oftentimes 00:38:08.080 --> 00:38:10.330 align:center requires learning more about your students, too, 00:38:10.330 --> 00:38:12.070 align:center learning more about their interests, 00:38:12.070 --> 00:38:13.570 align:center why they're taking this course, what 00:38:13.570 --> 00:38:17.440 align:center drives them to earn high grades or what drives them 00:38:17.440 --> 00:38:19.540 align:center toward the career path they're looking for 00:38:19.540 --> 00:38:22.610 align:center and what they need to achieve that. 00:38:22.610 --> 00:38:25.310 align:center So if we consider really this kind of alternative grading 00:38:25.310 --> 00:38:28.460 align:center to be the process of questioning our grading practices, 00:38:28.460 --> 00:38:30.593 align:center I think that something I think about a lot 00:38:30.593 --> 00:38:32.510 align:center is that I think alternative grading has helped 00:38:32.510 --> 00:38:34.760 align:center me to move to a place where I can probably 00:38:34.760 --> 00:38:38.240 align:center say to students that, yes, you can work on this 00:38:38.240 --> 00:38:41.330 align:center and demonstrate your learning later and get full credit 00:38:41.330 --> 00:38:42.622 align:center for that demonstrated learning. 00:38:42.622 --> 00:38:44.622 align:center And that's something that I felt like I wouldn't 00:38:44.622 --> 00:38:46.855 align:center be able to say in my old version of me before this, 00:38:46.855 --> 00:38:49.230 align:center where I felt like, yeah, well, this is the midterm score, 00:38:49.230 --> 00:38:50.563 align:center or this is the assignment score. 00:38:50.563 --> 00:38:52.115 align:center And I can't extend it for you. 00:38:52.115 --> 00:38:53.990 align:center I can't give you a second chance because that 00:38:53.990 --> 00:38:56.150 align:center would require giving everyone a second chance. 00:38:56.150 --> 00:38:58.220 align:center But I think if we think about, What 00:38:58.220 --> 00:39:00.350 align:center are our constraints actually? 00:39:00.350 --> 00:39:02.670 align:center And can we actually change those constraints? 00:39:02.670 --> 00:39:04.160 align:center Can we actually change those limits 00:39:04.160 --> 00:39:05.813 align:center that we've put on ourselves? 00:39:05.813 --> 00:39:07.730 align:center I think that can really give us a lot of space 00:39:07.730 --> 00:39:10.150 align:center to give students and make for better relationships 00:39:10.150 --> 00:39:11.275 align:center with students through this. 00:39:14.750 --> 00:39:16.400 align:center Yeah, and so all this, I think, has 00:39:16.400 --> 00:39:19.120 align:center helped me learn a lot about student work, student 00:39:19.120 --> 00:39:22.660 align:center motivations, students' learning goals really, 00:39:22.660 --> 00:39:25.210 align:center and help put me in, I think, a better relationship 00:39:25.210 --> 00:39:26.710 align:center with my students. 00:39:26.710 --> 00:39:29.870 align:center So with all that said, I'll end here. 00:39:29.870 --> 00:39:31.960 align:center So my call to action is, really, I 00:39:31.960 --> 00:39:33.790 align:center think I want us to redesign our grading 00:39:33.790 --> 00:39:36.230 align:center to be to better our relationship with students. 00:39:36.230 --> 00:39:39.130 align:center And I'll leave us with those three points 00:39:39.130 --> 00:39:43.390 align:center here that the three main ideas that students should have 00:39:43.390 --> 00:39:45.590 align:center multiple opportunities to demonstrate proficiency, 00:39:45.590 --> 00:39:47.882 align:center that grade should reflect the proficiency that students 00:39:47.882 --> 00:39:50.560 align:center demonstrate by the end, and that these grades and points are 00:39:50.560 --> 00:39:52.787 align:center de-emphasized in favor of rich, deep feedback 00:39:52.787 --> 00:39:54.370 align:center so that we can really, I think, better 00:39:54.370 --> 00:39:55.730 align:center our relationship with students. 00:39:55.730 --> 00:39:56.930 align:center So thank you all so much. 00:39:56.930 --> 00:40:00.910 align:center And I'll also give some thanks to the four other people that I 00:40:00.910 --> 00:40:03.400 align:center helped consult, who are all PhD students at the University 00:40:03.400 --> 00:40:07.010 align:center of Washington, Eman , Mina, Carly, and Rachel, 00:40:07.010 --> 00:40:11.710 align:center who helped in some ways in developing this talk. 00:40:11.710 --> 00:40:13.760 align:center And so it couldn't have been done without them. 00:40:13.760 --> 00:40:17.140 align:center So thank you all so much, and I'll leave it open for questions 00:40:17.140 --> 00:40:18.040 align:center now. 00:40:18.040 --> 00:40:20.040 align:center And this is a very long talk with me, 00:40:20.040 --> 00:40:23.708 align:center so I appreciate your attention with this. 00:40:23.708 --> 00:40:26.250 align:center And I'll just remind us that we do have the link in the chat. 00:40:26.250 --> 00:40:28.292 align:center So you can go and review my slides there as well. 00:40:33.410 --> 00:40:34.700 align:center ERIC TREKELL: All right. 00:40:34.700 --> 00:40:36.560 align:center Thank you, Kevin. 00:40:36.560 --> 00:40:39.080 align:center The floor is open for any questions 00:40:39.080 --> 00:40:41.420 align:center you may have for Kevin. 00:40:41.420 --> 00:40:43.640 align:center Feel free to either raise your hand 00:40:43.640 --> 00:40:46.073 align:center or post a message in the chat. 00:40:59.480 --> 00:41:01.520 align:center I see one hand raised, Kevin. 00:41:01.520 --> 00:41:05.420 align:center Victoria, would you like to unmute and ask your question? 00:41:05.420 --> 00:41:06.560 align:center VICTORIA: Sure. 00:41:06.560 --> 00:41:07.590 align:center It wasn't a question. 00:41:07.590 --> 00:41:11.240 align:center I was going to say, I just started last semester 00:41:11.240 --> 00:41:14.670 align:center or last two semesters on the final exam. 00:41:14.670 --> 00:41:16.970 align:center Like the students, if they missed a question 00:41:16.970 --> 00:41:19.530 align:center on the midterm, they're able to get the points back 00:41:19.530 --> 00:41:23.790 align:center on it if they got a similar question correct or same concept 00:41:23.790 --> 00:41:25.270 align:center correct on the final. 00:41:25.270 --> 00:41:27.570 align:center And the students had to tell me that 00:41:27.570 --> 00:41:31.260 align:center what questions they wanted me to look at to get the points back. 00:41:31.260 --> 00:41:34.470 align:center It was very successful. 00:41:34.470 --> 00:41:37.140 align:center And the students really appreciated the fact 00:41:37.140 --> 00:41:42.630 align:center that the midterm could almost be completely erased 00:41:42.630 --> 00:41:45.480 align:center if they really blew it because, as long as they-- 00:41:45.480 --> 00:41:47.670 align:center I said, I want you to learn by the end of the-- 00:41:47.670 --> 00:41:50.400 align:center by the end of the semester, you got to prove you learned it. 00:41:50.400 --> 00:41:52.276 align:center And it's been very successful. 00:41:55.013 --> 00:41:55.680 align:center KEVIN LIN: Yeah. 00:41:55.680 --> 00:41:56.680 align:center It's great to hear that. 00:41:56.680 --> 00:41:58.710 align:center Thank you for sharing the story, Victoria. 00:41:58.710 --> 00:41:59.320 align:center And I agree. 00:41:59.320 --> 00:42:01.445 align:center I think that there are all these small things where 00:42:01.445 --> 00:42:03.700 align:center it's like, huh, I hadn't thought of that idea before. 00:42:03.700 --> 00:42:05.488 align:center But it sounds like really good. 00:42:05.488 --> 00:42:07.780 align:center And we could try it out, see how it goes for this term. 00:42:07.780 --> 00:42:11.318 align:center And I think being flexible and open to changing in futures 00:42:11.318 --> 00:42:13.860 align:center and knowing that, hey, I think giving yourself a little grace 00:42:13.860 --> 00:42:15.670 align:center for it too, especially when you're trying new things, 00:42:15.670 --> 00:42:17.580 align:center be like, yeah, I want to give this a try. 00:42:17.580 --> 00:42:19.372 align:center I want to actually put some thought into it 00:42:19.372 --> 00:42:20.942 align:center and think about what fits me best. 00:42:20.942 --> 00:42:22.650 align:center I've actually shown you multiple systems. 00:42:22.650 --> 00:42:24.807 align:center I've shown you possibly too many possibilities. 00:42:24.807 --> 00:42:27.140 align:center But I hope you find one that kind of rings well with you 00:42:27.140 --> 00:42:28.500 align:center or rings well with your subject matter. 00:42:28.500 --> 00:42:30.583 align:center And I think a lot of it can be more subject matter 00:42:30.583 --> 00:42:31.970 align:center specific as well. 00:42:31.970 --> 00:42:34.740 align:center Some systems where I showed you specifications grading, 00:42:34.740 --> 00:42:36.870 align:center it tends to be that, I have these big assignments. 00:42:36.870 --> 00:42:38.328 align:center I have these big weekly assignments 00:42:38.328 --> 00:42:41.070 align:center that students are spending eight or so hours working on. 00:42:41.070 --> 00:42:43.580 align:center And so it makes sense to have a big specification for it 00:42:43.580 --> 00:42:45.570 align:center and just grade according to that specification. 00:42:45.570 --> 00:42:48.270 align:center But if you have small multiple choice quizzes on Canvas, 00:42:48.270 --> 00:42:51.210 align:center maybe that's more of a standards-based system. 00:42:51.210 --> 00:42:53.640 align:center Or maybe it's like the final exam clobbering, Victoria, 00:42:53.640 --> 00:42:55.268 align:center you were suggesting. 00:42:55.268 --> 00:42:57.810 align:center And then, Eric, do you want to moderate from here on out, or? 00:42:57.810 --> 00:42:59.102 align:center ERIC TREKELL: Yeah, absolutely. 00:42:59.102 --> 00:43:01.430 align:center We have two questions in the chat that came up first 00:43:01.430 --> 00:43:03.440 align:center and then a couple of hands raised. 00:43:03.440 --> 00:43:07.760 align:center Leslie is asking about the final exam clobbering. 00:43:07.760 --> 00:43:09.440 align:center Do you replace the full midterm grade 00:43:09.440 --> 00:43:13.455 align:center with what they achieved on the final exam if it's better? 00:43:13.455 --> 00:43:15.330 align:center KEVIN LIN: Yeah, thank you for that question. 00:43:15.330 --> 00:43:18.090 align:center And I think it was Leslie who asked that in the chat. 00:43:18.090 --> 00:43:19.300 align:center It's really up to you. 00:43:19.300 --> 00:43:20.520 align:center It could be multiple systems. 00:43:20.520 --> 00:43:23.473 align:center Like Victoria suggested, it's question-by-question basis. 00:43:23.473 --> 00:43:25.890 align:center So maybe on the final exam you have a very similar version 00:43:25.890 --> 00:43:26.890 align:center of the midterm question. 00:43:26.890 --> 00:43:28.840 align:center You're like, OK, I can map that back. 00:43:28.840 --> 00:43:31.290 align:center And to even be a little bit more forward looking 00:43:31.290 --> 00:43:33.265 align:center than the idea of Victoria suggested, 00:43:33.265 --> 00:43:35.640 align:center I think if you can do that mapping for all the questions, 00:43:35.640 --> 00:43:37.348 align:center you don't even have to have students ask. 00:43:37.348 --> 00:43:39.682 align:center You can just automatically apply it in your spreadsheet. 00:43:39.682 --> 00:43:41.670 align:center You can say, if the number on the final exam 00:43:41.670 --> 00:43:44.560 align:center question and the corresponding midterm question, 00:43:44.560 --> 00:43:46.540 align:center if that number on the final exam 1 is bigger, 00:43:46.540 --> 00:43:48.010 align:center then you can just replace the midterm 1. 00:43:48.010 --> 00:43:49.885 align:center So you can probably do it in an automated way 00:43:49.885 --> 00:43:52.770 align:center if you found the connections between the different problems. 00:43:52.770 --> 00:43:53.770 align:center That's really up to you. 00:43:53.770 --> 00:43:56.190 align:center That's up to you to do that work. 00:43:56.190 --> 00:43:59.220 align:center I've also been using final exam clobbering recently as well 00:43:59.220 --> 00:44:00.700 align:center in addition to resubmissions. 00:44:00.700 --> 00:44:03.550 align:center So for each of my exams, I let students revise. 00:44:03.550 --> 00:44:05.490 align:center And then even then, even if they feel 00:44:05.490 --> 00:44:08.550 align:center like they weren't able to revise or if they missed the window 00:44:08.550 --> 00:44:11.770 align:center for revising the exam during the quarter, 00:44:11.770 --> 00:44:14.402 align:center I also have the final exam to clobber, too. 00:44:14.402 --> 00:44:15.860 align:center For me, just to keep things simple, 00:44:15.860 --> 00:44:20.380 align:center I just have it be the parts of the final just completely 00:44:20.380 --> 00:44:24.253 align:center override parts of the midterm if it improves. 00:44:24.253 --> 00:44:26.420 align:center So I'm not thinking on a question-by-question basis. 00:44:26.420 --> 00:44:28.220 align:center But there are different ways that you can go about it. 00:44:28.220 --> 00:44:29.560 align:center It depends on how much time you have 00:44:29.560 --> 00:44:31.120 align:center to think through it, what you think 00:44:31.120 --> 00:44:33.805 align:center is the best way to organize things, and the practical side 00:44:33.805 --> 00:44:34.305 align:center of it, too. 00:44:36.750 --> 00:44:38.500 align:center ERIC TREKELL: So we have one more question 00:44:38.500 --> 00:44:40.000 align:center in the chat we'll do, and then we'll 00:44:40.000 --> 00:44:43.480 align:center move on to the raised hands. 00:44:43.480 --> 00:44:47.230 align:center Kevin, Dana asks, I was interested in the model 00:44:47.230 --> 00:44:49.910 align:center you presented from Evergreen, in addition to the other ideas. 00:44:49.910 --> 00:44:52.300 align:center Could you speak to student self-evaluation 00:44:52.300 --> 00:44:54.530 align:center and how it is related to the final grade? 00:44:54.530 --> 00:44:57.790 align:center I'm assuming that's at Evergreen. 00:44:57.790 --> 00:45:01.480 align:center KEVIN LIN: Yeah, so thank you for that question. 00:45:01.480 --> 00:45:03.910 align:center I'm not personally much more familiar with Evergreen 00:45:03.910 --> 00:45:05.812 align:center beyond the quotes that I suggested there. 00:45:05.812 --> 00:45:08.020 align:center The quotes that I pulled and the information I pulled 00:45:08.020 --> 00:45:10.223 align:center is actually public on the Evergreen State College. 00:45:10.223 --> 00:45:11.890 align:center Oftentimes, I imagine they get questions 00:45:11.890 --> 00:45:15.018 align:center from prospective students about, this is a weird grading system. 00:45:15.018 --> 00:45:16.060 align:center Can you tell me about it? 00:45:16.060 --> 00:45:18.352 align:center And I think there's a lot of potential for that grading 00:45:18.352 --> 00:45:19.080 align:center system. 00:45:19.080 --> 00:45:21.600 align:center The grading system itself, it has three parts or the end 00:45:21.600 --> 00:45:22.780 align:center of the term evaluations. 00:45:22.780 --> 00:45:25.300 align:center It's one is a faculty evaluation of the student. 00:45:25.300 --> 00:45:27.660 align:center One is a student evaluation of themselves, so 00:45:27.660 --> 00:45:29.155 align:center a student self-evaluation. 00:45:29.155 --> 00:45:31.530 align:center And then there's one of a student evaluation of teachers, 00:45:31.530 --> 00:45:33.947 align:center which is interesting because it's like I think as teachers 00:45:33.947 --> 00:45:36.360 align:center we're used to the student evaluations of teaching 00:45:36.360 --> 00:45:37.270 align:center from the students. 00:45:37.270 --> 00:45:40.060 align:center But now it's like a two-way communication. 00:45:40.060 --> 00:45:41.680 align:center It's not just students evaluating us. 00:45:41.680 --> 00:45:44.620 align:center But we're evaluating the students in a written way, 00:45:44.620 --> 00:45:47.310 align:center and students are evaluating themselves. 00:45:47.310 --> 00:45:49.780 align:center And in the transcript that students, 00:45:49.780 --> 00:45:51.550 align:center if they want to send out somewhere else, 00:45:51.550 --> 00:45:53.675 align:center it just includes, I think, the written evaluations. 00:45:53.675 --> 00:45:55.743 align:center It's just a big packet of all the evaluations 00:45:55.743 --> 00:45:57.660 align:center that students have accumulated over their time 00:45:57.660 --> 00:46:00.228 align:center as a student, which I think is amazing. 00:46:00.228 --> 00:46:01.770 align:center Obviously, it's more work for someone 00:46:01.770 --> 00:46:03.040 align:center who's evaluating that packet. 00:46:03.040 --> 00:46:05.970 align:center But I think it's so much richer if you're thinking about, oh, I 00:46:05.970 --> 00:46:08.532 align:center guess like undergraduate and pass would be graduate school. 00:46:08.532 --> 00:46:09.990 align:center Maybe those descriptive evaluations 00:46:09.990 --> 00:46:12.405 align:center are way more useful than a number could be. 00:46:15.280 --> 00:46:19.505 align:center ERIC TREKELL: Matthew, would you like to ask your question? 00:46:19.505 --> 00:46:20.380 align:center MATTHEW WILLIAMS: Hi. 00:46:20.380 --> 00:46:21.890 align:center Again, my name is Matthew Williams. 00:46:21.890 --> 00:46:24.680 align:center I teach business law at Olympic College. 00:46:24.680 --> 00:46:27.820 align:center One of the questions I wanted to figure out and piggyback off 00:46:27.820 --> 00:46:30.940 align:center everybody or figure out, pick your mindsets 00:46:30.940 --> 00:46:34.570 align:center is to, when you have that one individual, that one student, 00:46:34.570 --> 00:46:38.170 align:center who hasn't completed half of their assignments 00:46:38.170 --> 00:46:41.600 align:center within the course and getting to the midterm, 00:46:41.600 --> 00:46:45.860 align:center they also did terribly-- so it gets to the point of, hey, 00:46:45.860 --> 00:46:48.790 align:center now I have to have this stern conversation with you, 00:46:48.790 --> 00:46:53.180 align:center But I don't want to say, hey, don't continue your education. 00:46:53.180 --> 00:46:55.270 align:center But like, we need to pivot as to, 00:46:55.270 --> 00:46:57.790 align:center how are you going to get back on track? 00:46:57.790 --> 00:47:02.300 align:center What would be your methodology of trying to resolve of, hey, 00:47:02.300 --> 00:47:04.610 align:center I don't want to advise you to drop my class, 00:47:04.610 --> 00:47:06.988 align:center but also we got to get this together 00:47:06.988 --> 00:47:08.530 align:center because you're going to end up taking 00:47:08.530 --> 00:47:10.963 align:center this class all over again? 00:47:10.963 --> 00:47:11.630 align:center KEVIN LIN: Yeah. 00:47:11.630 --> 00:47:12.530 align:center Thank you for that-- 00:47:12.530 --> 00:47:14.870 align:center MATTHEW WILLIAMS: And for my particular course-- sorry. 00:47:14.870 --> 00:47:19.280 align:center For my particular course, majority of my coursework 00:47:19.280 --> 00:47:23.870 align:center that I'm assigning is quizzes. 00:47:23.870 --> 00:47:27.840 align:center So I have quizzes, midterm, and a final. 00:47:27.840 --> 00:47:29.930 align:center So how would you do that? 00:47:29.930 --> 00:47:33.650 align:center Or how would you triage that? 00:47:33.650 --> 00:47:34.760 align:center KEVIN LIN: Yeah. 00:47:34.760 --> 00:47:36.510 align:center I think this would be a good opportunity-- 00:47:36.510 --> 00:47:38.468 align:center thank you, Matthew, for that detailed question. 00:47:38.468 --> 00:47:40.550 align:center So I think the first part was about thinking 00:47:40.550 --> 00:47:45.770 align:center about how to design limits but also how to support students 00:47:45.770 --> 00:47:49.080 align:center and think about students who are struggling, processes for that, 00:47:49.080 --> 00:47:50.672 align:center thinking about systems for that. 00:47:50.672 --> 00:47:53.130 align:center And then I'll need you to remind me of your second question 00:47:53.130 --> 00:47:54.740 align:center because I was spending so much time thinking about that one 00:47:54.740 --> 00:47:55.280 align:center right now. 00:47:55.280 --> 00:47:55.436 align:center MATTHEW WILLIAMS: You're good. 00:47:55.436 --> 00:47:55.850 align:center Go ahead. 00:47:55.850 --> 00:47:56.940 align:center Go ahead with that question. 00:47:56.940 --> 00:47:57.590 align:center KEVIN LIN: Yes. 00:47:57.590 --> 00:47:59.840 align:center Let me first post in the chat a quick link 00:47:59.840 --> 00:48:03.930 align:center that can be useful as I speak about limits a little bit. 00:48:03.930 --> 00:48:05.835 align:center So there is this Grading for Growth, 00:48:05.835 --> 00:48:07.460 align:center which is written by Robert Talbert, who 00:48:07.460 --> 00:48:09.240 align:center is one of the quotes in this talk, 00:48:09.240 --> 00:48:12.020 align:center and David Clark are the main editors for that blog. 00:48:12.020 --> 00:48:13.630 align:center They take invited posts, but this 00:48:13.630 --> 00:48:16.270 align:center is one I think is written by David that talks about not 00:48:16.270 --> 00:48:18.070 align:center all limits are the same. 00:48:18.070 --> 00:48:21.340 align:center And so we had some interesting conversations, me, David, 00:48:21.340 --> 00:48:23.650 align:center and some other people, about that blog post 00:48:23.650 --> 00:48:26.900 align:center and how to think about limits and why we provide them. 00:48:26.900 --> 00:48:29.590 align:center And you can see what we arrived at for our intro programming 00:48:29.590 --> 00:48:32.510 align:center courses here at UW for computer science. 00:48:32.510 --> 00:48:34.700 align:center We have these limits that are, really, in part, 00:48:34.700 --> 00:48:36.700 align:center a good part of it is really the practical limits 00:48:36.700 --> 00:48:38.300 align:center that TAs have time for. 00:48:38.300 --> 00:48:39.170 align:center And you're right. 00:48:39.170 --> 00:48:40.712 align:center I think, Matthew, you're pointing out 00:48:40.712 --> 00:48:43.750 align:center that if a student get started so late in the quarter 00:48:43.750 --> 00:48:45.950 align:center or wants to recover midway through the quarter, 00:48:45.950 --> 00:48:48.970 align:center it can be hard to get a passing grade even because these limits 00:48:48.970 --> 00:48:49.970 align:center are designed this way. 00:48:49.970 --> 00:48:52.930 align:center And it'd be even worse for them in typical graded course 00:48:52.930 --> 00:48:55.780 align:center because they'd have 0s that they could not at all improve. 00:48:55.780 --> 00:48:57.950 align:center But here it can still be quite difficult, I think. 00:48:57.950 --> 00:49:00.642 align:center And depending on how you design those limits, it can be tricky. 00:49:00.642 --> 00:49:02.350 align:center I would say I think, when you're thinking 00:49:02.350 --> 00:49:04.250 align:center through those limits, whatever you come up with, 00:49:04.250 --> 00:49:05.708 align:center I think one of the important things 00:49:05.708 --> 00:49:09.390 align:center would be to have conversations with students as early as you 00:49:09.390 --> 00:49:09.890 align:center can. 00:49:09.890 --> 00:49:13.040 align:center That I found to be one of the most important things. 00:49:13.040 --> 00:49:15.530 align:center I'll give you an anecdote that's anecdata because there 00:49:15.530 --> 00:49:16.970 align:center is a data side to it. 00:49:16.970 --> 00:49:19.110 align:center When I was teaching some large courses at Berkeley, 00:49:19.110 --> 00:49:20.568 align:center one of the things that we found was 00:49:20.568 --> 00:49:22.880 align:center that there was a surprisingly high correlation 00:49:22.880 --> 00:49:25.610 align:center between the time in which students turned 00:49:25.610 --> 00:49:28.010 align:center in their first homework assignment and their final grade 00:49:28.010 --> 00:49:28.920 align:center in the course. 00:49:28.920 --> 00:49:31.340 align:center So students who are just working on the course 00:49:31.340 --> 00:49:33.230 align:center and prioritizing the course more or being 00:49:33.230 --> 00:49:35.970 align:center able to turn in their work earlier on the first assignment, 00:49:35.970 --> 00:49:37.910 align:center even the first week of the course, 00:49:37.910 --> 00:49:39.710 align:center you can literally have a pretty good signal 00:49:39.710 --> 00:49:42.210 align:center about how much time students are able to put into the class, 00:49:42.210 --> 00:49:45.308 align:center about how much prior knowledge or experience they have, 00:49:45.308 --> 00:49:47.600 align:center things like that, even just from things like submission 00:49:47.600 --> 00:49:49.140 align:center time for that first assignment. 00:49:49.140 --> 00:49:51.920 align:center So you can use things like that to help with narrowing down 00:49:51.920 --> 00:49:53.520 align:center like, OK, these are the people I should keep an eye on. 00:49:53.520 --> 00:49:56.020 align:center And then week 2 or week 3, as we're grading the assignments, 00:49:56.020 --> 00:49:58.312 align:center we can say, oh yeah, we should reach out to this person 00:49:58.312 --> 00:50:00.710 align:center and be like, hey, you've been doing great so far on this, 00:50:00.710 --> 00:50:02.377 align:center or this area could use some improvement. 00:50:02.377 --> 00:50:04.377 align:center Let's get you back on track and make sure you're 00:50:04.377 --> 00:50:05.730 align:center set up for success on that. 00:50:05.730 --> 00:50:08.580 align:center I think the biggest thing is reaching out early and using 00:50:08.580 --> 00:50:10.110 align:center different signals to do that, which 00:50:10.110 --> 00:50:13.830 align:center can be even submission time beyond the grade 00:50:13.830 --> 00:50:15.158 align:center for the assignment per se. 00:50:15.158 --> 00:50:16.200 align:center MATTHEW WILLIAMS: Gotcha. 00:50:16.200 --> 00:50:18.060 align:center KEVIN LIN: Can you remind me of your second question? 00:50:18.060 --> 00:50:20.060 align:center MATTHEW WILLIAMS: Yeah, you kind of answered it. 00:50:20.060 --> 00:50:24.540 align:center And just to pick one more thing, just for me, it is-- 00:50:24.540 --> 00:50:26.190 align:center again, I'm a brand new professor, 00:50:26.190 --> 00:50:32.160 align:center and so I am trying to learn to be student and also 00:50:32.160 --> 00:50:33.010 align:center be professor. 00:50:33.010 --> 00:50:35.730 align:center And on top of I'm also getting my PhD, so it's like, 00:50:35.730 --> 00:50:37.230 align:center ooh, I don't really have-- 00:50:37.230 --> 00:50:38.490 align:center I'm running out of-- 00:50:38.490 --> 00:50:41.280 align:center my patience is running thin when I'm sitting here writing 30-page 00:50:41.280 --> 00:50:44.410 align:center papers, but also, I am teaching you guys. 00:50:44.410 --> 00:50:46.140 align:center So it's like, hey, I need for you 00:50:46.140 --> 00:50:49.200 align:center guys to communicate with me as much as I'm also communicating 00:50:49.200 --> 00:50:50.500 align:center with my own professors. 00:50:50.500 --> 00:50:52.830 align:center So it's like I'm just trying to just figure out 00:50:52.830 --> 00:50:57.670 align:center the best way to trying to, hey, Matthew, 00:50:57.670 --> 00:51:01.540 align:center you were an undergrad once before. 00:51:01.540 --> 00:51:06.360 align:center Give that same grace that you were given back in the day. 00:51:06.360 --> 00:51:10.390 align:center So yeah, it's still a learning curve, but hey. 00:51:10.390 --> 00:51:11.240 align:center KEVIN LIN: Yeah. 00:51:11.240 --> 00:51:13.282 align:center And I think, especially if you're thinking about, 00:51:13.282 --> 00:51:15.380 align:center Is this change possible? 00:51:15.380 --> 00:51:17.180 align:center Do I have to get approval for this change? 00:51:17.180 --> 00:51:18.888 align:center I think some of the bigger grading ideas, 00:51:18.888 --> 00:51:21.610 align:center like having changing your entire course grading policy, 00:51:21.610 --> 00:51:24.310 align:center depending on your school's-- 00:51:24.310 --> 00:51:27.190 align:center the culture around how change happens, 00:51:27.190 --> 00:51:29.253 align:center it could be better to chat with someone else. 00:51:29.253 --> 00:51:30.670 align:center I know for here at UW, it would be 00:51:30.670 --> 00:51:32.878 align:center better for me to chat with someone else, for example. 00:51:32.878 --> 00:51:35.462 align:center But I think there are even small things you can do to be like, 00:51:35.462 --> 00:51:37.970 align:center hey oh, I noticed that I'm already giving this assignment. 00:51:37.970 --> 00:51:41.000 align:center Or I'm already giving this exam or this assessment or this quiz. 00:51:41.000 --> 00:51:42.470 align:center And if I'm reassessing it later on, 00:51:42.470 --> 00:51:43.720 align:center I can just do that clobbering. 00:51:43.720 --> 00:51:45.720 align:center It can be on a quiz level, like you were saying, 00:51:45.720 --> 00:51:47.145 align:center I think, for your examples. 00:51:47.145 --> 00:51:49.520 align:center So if you're asking the same types of questions later on, 00:51:49.520 --> 00:51:51.940 align:center you could say, hey, Could that later assessment 00:51:51.940 --> 00:51:53.620 align:center be used to improve your earlier score? 00:51:53.620 --> 00:51:55.940 align:center without really having to do more work for yourself 00:51:55.940 --> 00:51:56.860 align:center because, like I mentioned, I think 00:51:56.860 --> 00:51:58.870 align:center this could be set up as a little spreadsheet thing where you just 00:51:58.870 --> 00:52:00.828 align:center say, if this number is bigger than this number, 00:52:00.828 --> 00:52:02.298 align:center then replace it with that. 00:52:02.298 --> 00:52:04.090 align:center So I think that's something that can really 00:52:04.090 --> 00:52:05.450 align:center look at your own workload. 00:52:05.450 --> 00:52:07.162 align:center And I agree. 00:52:07.162 --> 00:52:08.860 align:center I think it's not really on-- 00:52:08.860 --> 00:52:12.000 align:center I think you should look at your own capacity, too, and be like, 00:52:12.000 --> 00:52:13.690 align:center can I offer this to students? 00:52:13.690 --> 00:52:16.420 align:center And out of all the different ways I could use my time, 00:52:16.420 --> 00:52:18.840 align:center what's the best way for me to use it to benefit 00:52:18.840 --> 00:52:20.080 align:center the students that I want? 00:52:22.745 --> 00:52:24.870 align:center ERIC TREKELL: I do want to be cognizant of the fact 00:52:24.870 --> 00:52:29.370 align:center that our accommodation staff do have other assignments they 00:52:29.370 --> 00:52:31.900 align:center have to get to, so we've only got a few more minutes. 00:52:31.900 --> 00:52:35.040 align:center But, Eric you had your hand raised, if you'd 00:52:35.040 --> 00:52:36.160 align:center like to ask your question. 00:52:36.160 --> 00:52:39.720 align:center And we may have to do some follow-up 00:52:39.720 --> 00:52:41.860 align:center emails with some questions. 00:52:41.860 --> 00:52:43.650 align:center We'll see. 00:52:43.650 --> 00:52:44.500 align:center ERIC: Thank you. 00:52:44.500 --> 00:52:45.340 align:center I appreciate that. 00:52:45.340 --> 00:52:46.990 align:center Kevin, Great presentation. 00:52:46.990 --> 00:52:48.820 align:center It's really helpful and informative. 00:52:48.820 --> 00:52:54.240 align:center I'm a adjunct faculty for an online master of social work 00:52:54.240 --> 00:52:55.180 align:center program. 00:52:55.180 --> 00:53:01.020 align:center And with that being said, I find that a lot of my assignments 00:53:01.020 --> 00:53:04.380 align:center are more writing and reflective. 00:53:04.380 --> 00:53:07.870 align:center And I found it always really uncomfortable 00:53:07.870 --> 00:53:11.560 align:center grading reflective assignments using a standard grading model. 00:53:11.560 --> 00:53:16.360 align:center And I'm by no means an expert in the field of education 00:53:16.360 --> 00:53:19.030 align:center or higher ed, so I'm curious if you 00:53:19.030 --> 00:53:25.390 align:center have any recommendations for an alternative means of grading 00:53:25.390 --> 00:53:30.513 align:center reflective essays and competency-based assignments? 00:53:30.513 --> 00:53:31.180 align:center KEVIN LIN: Yeah. 00:53:31.180 --> 00:53:32.770 align:center Thank you for the question, Eric I 00:53:32.770 --> 00:53:35.810 align:center think maybe I'll say something that might sound a little funny, 00:53:35.810 --> 00:53:37.940 align:center and then hopefully we can dig into it a little bit. 00:53:37.940 --> 00:53:40.390 align:center So the funny thing I'll say is, have you considered 00:53:40.390 --> 00:53:42.282 align:center not grading it per se? 00:53:42.282 --> 00:53:43.490 align:center Because I think you're right. 00:53:43.490 --> 00:53:45.820 align:center I think if you feel uncomfortable or feel 00:53:45.820 --> 00:53:48.180 align:center like it's not necessarily aligned with rubrics 00:53:48.180 --> 00:53:50.180 align:center or it's difficult to figure out how to align it, 00:53:50.180 --> 00:53:51.580 align:center maybe you don't have to grade it in the way 00:53:51.580 --> 00:53:53.305 align:center that you think of it in terms of quality. 00:53:53.305 --> 00:53:54.680 align:center You can say maybe, did you do it? 00:53:54.680 --> 00:53:56.770 align:center Do you have requirements, like word count? 00:53:56.770 --> 00:53:58.520 align:center Or does it seem reflective? 00:53:58.520 --> 00:54:00.375 align:center It could be more coarse grained. 00:54:00.375 --> 00:54:02.500 align:center I agree, I think it could get really hard if you're 00:54:02.500 --> 00:54:04.520 align:center trying to say, 0 to 10, what's the quality 00:54:04.520 --> 00:54:05.810 align:center of this reflective essay? 00:54:05.810 --> 00:54:06.860 align:center I think that's just a-- 00:54:06.860 --> 00:54:09.432 align:center I would not want to put myself in that position either. 00:54:09.432 --> 00:54:11.640 align:center So I think you can still ask for quality if you want. 00:54:11.640 --> 00:54:13.348 align:center You can like, hey, I want to see that you 00:54:13.348 --> 00:54:15.480 align:center have evidence of self-reflection, 00:54:15.480 --> 00:54:16.313 align:center like a 0 or 1 thing. 00:54:16.313 --> 00:54:18.647 align:center Or it could be like it meets a certain word count that's 00:54:18.647 --> 00:54:19.500 align:center like a 0 or 1 thing. 00:54:19.500 --> 00:54:20.570 align:center And that's also easy for students 00:54:20.570 --> 00:54:21.653 align:center to be able to self-assess. 00:54:21.653 --> 00:54:24.600 align:center Oh yeah, I can just check my word count, or I can check that, 00:54:24.600 --> 00:54:26.160 align:center does it seem reflective to myself? 00:54:26.160 --> 00:54:27.890 align:center And hopefully it's somewhat unambiguous 00:54:27.890 --> 00:54:30.813 align:center or less ambiguous than a 0 to 10 quality scale thing. 00:54:30.813 --> 00:54:32.480 align:center So I think removing the number of levels 00:54:32.480 --> 00:54:34.605 align:center or thinking about how can you simplify that grading 00:54:34.605 --> 00:54:36.480 align:center scale or even altogether, you can say, 00:54:36.480 --> 00:54:38.100 align:center I want you to do this reflection. 00:54:38.100 --> 00:54:41.438 align:center And that can be convincing to some students but not to all. 00:54:41.438 --> 00:54:43.980 align:center I think it depends on where your students are in the program. 00:54:43.980 --> 00:54:45.647 align:center If they're higher level, like 400-level, 00:54:45.647 --> 00:54:47.580 align:center senior-level students, maybe they'll do it. 00:54:47.580 --> 00:54:48.360 align:center Maybe they'll be too busy. 00:54:48.360 --> 00:54:49.050 align:center Maybe they'll be checked out. 00:54:49.050 --> 00:54:50.790 align:center I think have to look at your own students and be like, 00:54:50.790 --> 00:54:52.110 align:center what if I didn't grade it? 00:54:52.110 --> 00:54:53.777 align:center What if I just said, you should do this. 00:54:53.777 --> 00:54:55.495 align:center And we'll read it, or I'll read it later. 00:54:55.495 --> 00:54:56.870 align:center And I'll give you feedback on it. 00:54:56.870 --> 00:54:58.430 align:center Maybe students will appreciate that you're giving them 00:54:58.430 --> 00:55:01.050 align:center feedback, even though there's no grade attached to it, per se, 00:55:01.050 --> 00:55:03.100 align:center the fact that you're looking at it, that they're 00:55:03.100 --> 00:55:05.213 align:center expecting you to respond, you're expecting 00:55:05.213 --> 00:55:06.380 align:center them to give them something. 00:55:06.380 --> 00:55:08.088 align:center Or maybe you do it in a different format, 00:55:08.088 --> 00:55:10.352 align:center where maybe you say, email me your reflection. 00:55:10.352 --> 00:55:12.310 align:center And that way it doesn't feel like an assignment 00:55:12.310 --> 00:55:13.990 align:center in the same way, right? 00:55:13.990 --> 00:55:17.300 align:center And it does enable you to have a conversation, 00:55:17.300 --> 00:55:21.280 align:center so maybe changing the ways in which you formulate that. 00:55:21.280 --> 00:55:22.748 align:center Those are just some ideas. 00:55:22.748 --> 00:55:24.290 align:center I hope some of them sound ridiculous, 00:55:24.290 --> 00:55:27.190 align:center but I think by looking past our typical bounds of, 00:55:27.190 --> 00:55:29.320 align:center this is how we typically do an assignment, 00:55:29.320 --> 00:55:30.970 align:center I think really unleash some creativity 00:55:30.970 --> 00:55:32.560 align:center in terms of changing that relationship with students 00:55:32.560 --> 00:55:33.060 align:center on that. 00:55:35.530 --> 00:55:37.820 align:center ERIC TREKELL: Not sure what was going on there, 00:55:37.820 --> 00:55:39.570 align:center but I apologize for that. 00:55:42.370 --> 00:55:43.160 align:center Let's see. 00:55:43.160 --> 00:55:45.790 align:center We've got about three minutes, so maybe we 00:55:45.790 --> 00:55:48.840 align:center can catch one question in the chat. 00:55:51.790 --> 00:55:55.720 align:center Kevin, Leah asked, I'm teaching a capstone class 00:55:55.720 --> 00:55:58.250 align:center on software design and development at Grinnell. 00:55:58.250 --> 00:56:00.340 align:center How do you think we should assess student work 00:56:00.340 --> 00:56:02.090 align:center in an upper-level class, where students 00:56:02.090 --> 00:56:04.580 align:center can learn different things from each other 00:56:04.580 --> 00:56:07.183 align:center and can learn things that instructor didn't directly 00:56:07.183 --> 00:56:07.683 align:center teach? 00:56:10.725 --> 00:56:13.100 align:center KEVIN LIN: Ooh, how do you think we should assess student 00:56:13.100 --> 00:56:14.510 align:center work in upper-level class, where students 00:56:14.510 --> 00:56:16.260 align:center can learn different things from each other 00:56:16.260 --> 00:56:18.710 align:center and can learn things that the instructor didn't directly 00:56:18.710 --> 00:56:19.298 align:center teach? 00:56:19.298 --> 00:56:19.798 align:center Huh. 00:56:22.490 --> 00:56:24.900 align:center I have not necessarily been put in that situation before, 00:56:24.900 --> 00:56:26.677 align:center but that's a really interesting question. 00:56:26.677 --> 00:56:27.760 align:center Let me think a little bit. 00:56:38.300 --> 00:56:39.510 align:center Yeah, creative work. 00:56:39.510 --> 00:56:42.920 align:center I think a little bit to the earlier point, I think Eric 00:56:42.920 --> 00:56:45.140 align:center and I were having this discussion in the chat here 00:56:45.140 --> 00:56:46.630 align:center or in the meeting right now. 00:56:50.456 --> 00:56:53.895 align:center I think if you can make-- 00:56:53.895 --> 00:56:55.270 align:center even though it's creative work, I 00:56:55.270 --> 00:56:57.270 align:center think there are probably still some expectations 00:56:57.270 --> 00:56:58.890 align:center for the format of the response. 00:56:58.890 --> 00:57:01.380 align:center You're expecting them to have maybe a written essay. 00:57:01.380 --> 00:57:03.130 align:center Or maybe they're answering some questions, 00:57:03.130 --> 00:57:04.870 align:center or they're having some kind of analysis. 00:57:04.870 --> 00:57:06.420 align:center Or maybe there's some kind of end 00:57:06.420 --> 00:57:08.950 align:center artistic, creative product that they're producing. 00:57:08.950 --> 00:57:10.620 align:center There are probably maybe at least 00:57:10.620 --> 00:57:13.192 align:center some amount of standardization in the format of that. 00:57:13.192 --> 00:57:15.525 align:center So maybe you could look at what are the elements of that 00:57:15.525 --> 00:57:17.417 align:center that you want to see there. 00:57:17.417 --> 00:57:18.250 align:center Now, it's up to you. 00:57:18.250 --> 00:57:20.320 align:center You could say maybe there's quality within that. 00:57:20.320 --> 00:57:21.820 align:center Maybe you might say that the quality 00:57:21.820 --> 00:57:24.180 align:center of this particular artistic, creative output 00:57:24.180 --> 00:57:25.590 align:center might still be something you rank 00:57:25.590 --> 00:57:30.463 align:center from 0, 1, 2, or 3 or some kind of simple rubric like that. 00:57:30.463 --> 00:57:32.380 align:center I think that's a little bit opaque to students 00:57:32.380 --> 00:57:33.900 align:center because they don't really know if they've 00:57:33.900 --> 00:57:35.983 align:center met the quality that you're looking for until they 00:57:35.983 --> 00:57:36.760 align:center get that feedback. 00:57:36.760 --> 00:57:38.177 align:center But then maybe that it's important 00:57:38.177 --> 00:57:40.390 align:center that you have feedback during the term to be like, 00:57:40.390 --> 00:57:42.057 align:center I'm actually giving you helpful feedback 00:57:42.057 --> 00:57:45.750 align:center to help you see where you stand right now and help direct you 00:57:45.750 --> 00:57:48.720 align:center in directions that will make it so that this larger learning 00:57:48.720 --> 00:57:52.048 align:center activity ends up panning out the way you expect it to pan out. 00:57:52.048 --> 00:57:54.340 align:center So I think it's giving students feedback along the way. 00:57:54.340 --> 00:57:55.950 align:center I think it's thinking about, what 00:57:55.950 --> 00:57:59.070 align:center are the elements of the format and the requirements 00:57:59.070 --> 00:58:02.432 align:center that can be specified, can be codified into a rubric? 00:58:02.432 --> 00:58:03.890 align:center But also maybe there are some parts 00:58:03.890 --> 00:58:05.630 align:center that aren't easily codified, in which case 00:58:05.630 --> 00:58:07.370 align:center you're giving them feedback throughout that process 00:58:07.370 --> 00:58:09.290 align:center to help students feel prepared for what 00:58:09.290 --> 00:58:12.230 align:center you're assessing at the end. 00:58:12.230 --> 00:58:13.230 align:center ERIC TREKELL: All right. 00:58:13.230 --> 00:58:19.910 align:center I do want to make sure that we release the accessibility staff 00:58:19.910 --> 00:58:21.240 align:center in a timely fashion. 00:58:21.240 --> 00:58:23.220 align:center So we are going to stop here. 00:58:23.220 --> 00:58:25.583 align:center I'd just like to thank you, Kevin, so much. 00:58:25.583 --> 00:58:27.000 align:center I've been looking forward to this. 00:58:27.000 --> 00:58:29.940 align:center I know been communicating for a while to try to get this set up. 00:58:29.940 --> 00:58:32.210 align:center So thank you so much. 00:58:32.210 --> 00:58:35.490 align:center Lots of positive response in the chat. 00:58:35.490 --> 00:58:39.750 align:center Everyone, if you would please complete the evaluation, 00:58:39.750 --> 00:58:42.230 align:center the short evaluation that we have shared out. 00:58:42.230 --> 00:58:45.300 align:center Thank you to our interpreters, to our CART provider. 00:58:45.300 --> 00:58:47.120 align:center Thank you all for joining us today, 00:58:47.120 --> 00:58:51.460 align:center and have a good day the rest of your day.