Using Moodle assignments in the School of Education
Background
We needed certain features that were available in Moodle assignments and did not need the features that Turnitin offered, e.g.,
- a School-specific grading scale (a system of ‘spot marks’)
- to support School policy on grading
- to deliver grades via Moodle
- School assessment policy also requires the return to each student of a ‘feedback form’ for each assignment, explaining the criteria used in grading and how each particular assignment met (or failed to meet) those criteria.
What did you do?
- We found Moodle assignments to be more configurable for our needs than Turnitin assignments. We now use Moodle assignments in modules across the School.
- We could add our own grading scale (a system of ‘spot marks’) which ensured a match between School policy on grading, and the delivery of grades via Moodle.
- We could also make use of Moodle’s ‘response files’ feature, which was important to us because of the need to return the feedback forms.
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How did it work out?
- It is appropriate to support the School’s assessment policy
- Staff were happy enough with it
- Students have very little difficulty with it
Recommendations and tips
- In 12-13 I set up a rather clunky ‘copy and paste’ activity (using the ‘notes’ feature) to get students to confirm that they understood the regulations relating to assignment submission. In 13-14 I’ve ditched that idea and now simply remind students of the regulations (I include a link to them) and tell them that by clicking on ‘send for marking’ they are agreeing that they understand them.
- One thing we find particularly useful is the ability to set up resubmission assignments which are visible only to students who fail to get a pass mark in the original assignment (using ‘grade condition’ in the ‘restrict access’ settings).
- The problem many staff encounter is that the grading screen contains too many columns and finding the ‘grade’ button for a particular assignment can involve a lot of horizontal scrolling.
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More information:
Background
Peter wanted to use a couple of different tools to extend classroom conversation, to explore what he likes to term ?third-space teaching?, creating an environment which is genuinely collaborative, genuinely owned by students, but which also intersects with the live experience of the classroom and locates what we are doing in a wider community of independent responsibility and gives them a sense of empowerment. He used Twitter on one module and Moodle wikis on another.
The module is Shakespeare and Jonson, a comparative early modern theatrical literature course. Important to this is the idea is now that we are entering the end of a period of relative textual stability and that when Gutenberg invented the printing press we replaced a culture of primarily oral transmission / scribal transmission with fixity printed texts. Digital media is reversing that, taking us back into a culture where people were more inclined to scribble, to compile, create multiple kinds of texts, none of which has more authority than others.
What did you do?
Peter decided to use wikis as a way of replicating the ?commonplace book? – a personal log of one?s own experiences into which people would ?copy and paste? quotations, references, texts, etc. Commonplace books were objects owned by individuals but always intersecting, often shared, often passed around. The wiki is a really interesting way of replicating these ideas – a wiki does not need to be authoritative (don?t cite Wikipedia!)
The wiki was used to give students a chance to become experts in a particular contextual area of the course, log their ideas and share their ideas at an early stage. The course has two classes of 20 students, and two students in each class were given a research specialism, such as The Blackfriars, the Globe, Shakespeare?s life, Jonson?s life, boy actors etc. The students were told from day one they would be the class?s knowledge expert (?go-to person?) on this subject.
Wikis provided the commonplace book which supplemented them. All students have access to all the wikis, with the `experts? taking responsibility for editing a particular one. Peter gave them starting suggestions, and specific seminar sessions which they were to contribute to, then week by week they were required to put together wikis online. As they built up ideas they created a digital commonplace book, bringing in pictures, article reviews, summaries, diagrams and computer modules, and began critiquing the materials.
How did it work out?
This level of research was in the past carried out at the end of the module when preparing their individual essays – very contained individual sequence of tasks. The students started this in the knowledge that it would contribute to their individual essays – their research questions. The students responsible for each wiki did not meet in person, so the wiki was a third space where students in different seminar groups collaborated on these wikis, reading each other?s work, supplementing it and building together a collaborative research base much broader than any of them would have been able to achieve individually.
And as the class went on, they continued building up the wikis, using them in class. Peter could also pick up on them in class, to introduce the kind of work they?d been doing.
The alchemy example shows pages representing several thousand words? worth of writing.
The students could:
- pool their resources
- parcel out work
- create collaboratively
- go off and write very different individual essays
- take ownership of their learning (finding out things even Peter didn?t know about)
What did students think?
Peter gave more firsts than he?d ever given before – because essays were written from a much deeper research base not created at the end
For students:
- it removed anxiety they had about writing up to the correct standard
- they could take initial notes and readings and share ?raw? before needing to have extensive distillation of it
- they had the freedom to practice writing in a more informal context
- they could identify their specialisation
- they could build on rich shared foundation of knowledge
- They were writing worth something from day 1 not just an essay only seen by them and their marker
More information
Presentation
Using wikis to create student knowledge hubs - Peter Kirwan.ppt
Video
- Peter Kirwan talking about the wikis
Using wikis to create a student knowledge hub
Peter Kirwan
School of English
Shakespeare and Jonson (Q33601 UK) (SPR 12-13)
Background
Peter wanted to use a couple of different tools to extend classroom conversation, to explore what he likes to term ?third-space teaching?, creating an environment which is genuinely collaborative, genuinely owned by students, but which also intersects with the live experience of the classroom and locates what we are doing in a wider community of independent responsibility and gives them a sense of empowerment. He used Twitter on one module and Moodle wikis on another.
The module is Shakespeare and Jonson, a comparative early modern theatrical literature course. Important to this is the idea is now that we are entering the end of a period of relative textual stability and that when Gutenberg invented the printing press we replaced a culture of primarily oral transmission / scribal transmission with fixity printed texts. Digital media is reversing that, taking us back into a culture where people were more inclined to scribble, to compile, create multiple kinds of texts, none of which has more authority than others.
What did you do?
Peter decided to use wikis as a way of replicating the ?commonplace book? – a personal log of one?s own experiences into which people would ?copy and paste? quotations, references, texts, etc. Commonplace books were objects owned by individuals but always intersecting, often shared, often passed around. The wiki is a really interesting way of replicating these ideas – a wiki does not need to be authoritative (don?t cite Wikipedia!)
The wiki was used to give students a chance to become experts in a particular contextual area of the course, log their ideas and share their ideas at an early stage. The course has two classes of 20 students, and two students in each class were given a research specialism, such as The Blackfriars, the Globe, Shakespeare?s life, Jonson?s life, boy actors etc. The students were told from day one they would be the class?s knowledge expert (?go-to person?) on this subject.
Wikis provided the commonplace book which supplemented them. All students have access to all the wikis, with the `experts? taking responsibility for editing a particular one. Peter gave them starting suggestions, and specific seminar sessions which they were to contribute to, then week by week they were required to put together wikis online. As they built up ideas they created a digital commonplace book, bringing in pictures, article reviews, summaries, diagrams and computer modules, and began critiquing the materials.
How did it work out?
This level of research was in the past carried out at the end of the module when preparing their individual essays – very contained individual sequence of tasks. The students started this in the knowledge that it would contribute to their individual essays – their research questions. The students responsible for each wiki did not meet in person, so the wiki was a third space where students in different seminar groups collaborated on these wikis, reading each other?s work, supplementing it and building together a collaborative research base much broader than any of them would have been able to achieve individually.
And as the class went on, they continued building up the wikis, using them in class. Peter could also pick up on them in class, to introduce the kind of work they?d been doing.
The alchemy example shows pages representing several thousand words? worth of writing.
The students could:
- pool their resources
- parcel out work
- create collaboratively
- go off and write very different individual essays
- take ownership of their learning (finding out things even Peter didn?t know about)
What did students think?
Peter gave more firsts than he?d ever given before – because essays were written from a much deeper research base not created at the end
For students:
- it removed anxiety they had about writing up to the correct standard
- they could take initial notes and readings and share ?raw? before needing to have extensive distillation of it
- they had the freedom to practice writing in a more informal context
- they could identify their specialisation
- they could build on rich shared foundation of knowledge
- They were writing worth something from day 1 not just an essay only seen by them and their marker
More information
Presentation
Using wikis to create student knowledge hubs - Peter Kirwan.ppt
Video
- Peter Kirwan talking about the wikis
How to achieve this: