Author Archives: Mark Glynn

Creating on-line quizzes for your e-learning courses – Articulate Quizmaker

Quizmaker ’09 has a range of easy to use features. These inlude:

  • Quickly group and randomize question pools—without separating questions that should appear together
  • Include images, Flash, and audio—even create a scenario that develops over several screens
  • Branch quiz takers to different slides depending on how they answer each question
  • Animate objects and adjust their timing on the click-and-drag timeline
  • Choose from a wide selection of professionally designed themes or create your own
  • Give your quiz takers specific results and feedback based on their scores
  • Get quiz results through e-mail, your LMS

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Feedback through technology

The results of our assessment influence our students for the rest of their lives and careers – fine if we get it right, but unthinkable if we get it wrong. – Phil Race, 2009

There is a tremendous amount of work being done throughout the sector to enhance student feedback. Feedback is an essential part of effective learning. It helps students understand the subject being studied and gives them clear guidance on how to improve their learning. Feedback can improve a student’s confidence, self-awareness and enthusiasm for learning. Substantial developments in educational technology allow staff to speed up feedback provision, to provide more detailed feedback and to encourage greater engagement of students with the feedback process.

According to Gibbs and Simpson (2004), good teacher feedback should focus on what students have achieved and what they need to do next. It should be timely, so ideally it should be available when students are ‘stuck’, when it will have maximum impact, and in time to improve subsequent assignments. Nicol and Macfarlane-Dick (2006) maintained that good-quality feedback should ultimately be geared to helping students to learn to trouble-shoot and self-correct their own performance. This might be achieved by providing feedback which, rather than giving the answer, points students to where to find the answer (for example, ‘go back to p 35 in the text and rethink how you would explain this point in future’), or by providing feedback on students’ attempts to self-assess their own work.

Other strategies known to enhance the power of teacher feedback include linking feedback information to assessment criteria, providing corrective advice and not just information on strengths and weaknesses, and prioritising specific areas for improvement. There is evidence that ‘feed-forward’ information is more effective than feedback information. Such information does not just tell students where they went wrong, but also what to focus on to make improvements in subsequent tasks (Knight, 2006). This helps to stimulate transfer of learning to new problems.

Both Yorke (2005) and Tinto (2005) have argued that teacher feedback is of critical importance to student learning, especially in the first year of undergraduate study. Teacher feedback helps to reinforce academic expectations in the early stages of a module or programme, and is especially important when academic demands differ from those experienced by students before entering HE (Yorke and Longden, 2004). Teacher feedback is also a source against which students can check their understanding of assessment requirements, criteria and standards.

Through feedback, students can learn from their mistakes and misconceptions and build on achievements. Over time, teacher feedback should help students to develop accurate perceptions of their abilities and establish internal standards against which to evaluate their own work.  Research shows that a great deal of feedback given to students is delayed (for example, feedback on the first assignment not being given until after the second assignment is due), not understood, demotivating and does not provide any guidance for future action. So how can technology fix that? The following screencast illustrates how I have used two features of the learning management systems – Moodle, to issue timely comprehensive feedback to students.

I would appreciate any thoughts that you have on how technology can enhance feedback and possibly some examples that you would be willing to share.

Further weblinks – http://www.diigo.com/user/markglynn/feedback

Related posts: Rubrics, Audacity, Moodle

Articulate presenter

Articulate Presenter ’09 makes it easy for anyone to add interactivity and narration to PowerPoint slides.

Just click a button to turn your presentation into a compelling Flash course.
Create Flash content with ease

Click here for the main features of presenter 09

How to … guide

This section gives short video clip instructions on how to compelte various taks using Articulate

Getting Started

How do I add a movie to my presentation

How do I record narration and symchronise my animations within my presentation

How to upload a presenter file to moodle

How to combine Quiz Properties, hidden slides and branching options in course development. #articulate

More advanced features

Here’s how to embed Google Maps into your #Articulate presentation via web objects

How to embed vimeo.com video as a web object into an Articulate presentation

Using Articulate Web Objects to provide slide-level attachments or resources

How to insert a flash video

How to simulate multiple videos on a single slide in Presenter ’09

How to insert an Articulate Presenter slide into an Engage Tabs interaction

how to upload an articulate file as a scorm object so it can be tracked by blackboard

Rubrics for assessment

SLEDcc_orange_rubrics_semifinal_draft

SLEDcc_orange_rubrics_semifinal_draft (Photo credit: Fleep Tuque)

A rubric is an attempt to communicate expectations of quality around a task.  A rubric can also provide a basis for self-evaluation, reflection, and peer review. It is aimed at accurate and fair assessment, fostering understanding, and indicating a way to proceed with subsequent learning/teaching.Please find abelow a variety of rubrics that I have encountered from various workshops and courses that I have attended. Please give the authors of the rubrics the appropriate recognition if you decide to spread these on to your colleagues.

Peer Assessment Rubric – based on a design by Richard Felder

Sharon Flynn from NUI Galway very kindly shared rubric that she uses for On Discussion participation

Oral assessment – Dolan School of Business, Fairfield University

As a student on the Learning Innovation Network special purpose award “Teaching and Learning”, I received feedback in the form of a rubric on a seminar paper that I submitted to the course instructors, led by Marion Palmer, IADT.

There is also a good discussion in this article on rubrics for student blogs

I would be really interested in your comments on rubrics and would be delighted if you would be willing to share rubrics that you have came across throughout your education. I have also found great websites on assessment that can be accessing by clicking http://www.diigo.com/user/markglynn/assessment

Mahara – “how to…..” guide

Mahara logo

Here are a selection of screencasts that will help you perform some of the more basic tasks in Mahara

How to access the site

How to create a “view” in Mahara

Creating your profile

Create your resume skills and goals

How to set up a group

Managing your view once it is created

How to manage an assignment through Mahara

Create a hyperlink to another webpage

Share your view with people

How to add an RSS feed in Mahara

Mahara – open source e-portfolio system

Mahara logoAs an online portfolio, Mahara is a place to store institutional and personal learning articles or ‘artefacts’.  Students can use these artefacts to demonstrate their development over time to various audiences including prospective universities and future employers.

Mahara also provides a comprehensive blogging tool, social networking and a CV builder.  Users have their own personalised profiles which they can use to add employment and education history, accreditations, achievements and goals.

Communities can be built within Mahara – users have the ability to connect with other users, create and maintain lists of friends. One of the features that differentiates Mahara from other ePortfolio systems is that users control which items and what information within their portfolio other users see.

For a short video introduction on Mahara click here

For a series of instructional videos on performing a variety of tasks in Mahara – visit my How to guide…...”  for Mahara

Podcasting – some useful resources

why podcasts can be useful in teaching, what tools can be used to make them, and how they can incorporate them into their Google Sites. The links below includes a video, downloadable notes, and some useful resources for additional information all orientated around podcasting.

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When is copy right and when is it wrong to copy?

The advance of technology has made sharing of information and images very easy. But as both a student and a lecturer –  when is it right to use other peoples material. As a matter of what I consider good practice, I always reference my material – however is this enough? Can I use the image or cartoon that I found on the internet in my teaching powerpoints or within my student assignments?

In an effort to answer this I have read many articles, blogs and books. However the clearest explanation that I found comes compliments of Brad Templeton – 10 Myths about Copyright

http://www.templetons.com/brad/copymyths.html

As an educator don’t get too frightened. You may have heard of the term “fair use” – this is, in my opinion a teachers “get out of jail card” (homage to “Monopoly” board game). The following link outlines some frequently asked questions on this area – if you are in education pay particular attention to question 4

http://w2.eff.org/IP/eff_fair_use_faq.php

I would appreciate readers thoughts on this and all links to other interesting articles on this topic

Reasons to move to Moodle 2 – over to you | Some Random Thoughts

Reasons to move to Moodle 2 – over to you | Some Random Thoughts.

Gavin Hendrick presented some great reasons why to make the move to Moodle 2. An incredibly informative session with Gavin and if you get the chance to sit down and wrack his technical brain on Moodle 2 – grab it with both hands

Moodle 2.0 – conditional activities

Conditional activities are a game changer in my opinion. It is an excellent new feature of Moodle 2 that will bring independent learning to a new level for Moodle users. For those not familiar with the concept, the introduction of conditional activities means a “teacher” can set it that their “student” will not be able to progress to topic B,before completing topic A to a specified standard e.g. achieve a certain grade in a quiz or read a document or powerpoint document.

They are incredibly easy to set up and numerous screencasts have already found their way onto YouTube. Here are a few  of the better screencasts on this topic

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