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So, before we get started, I need to tell you that this page gives the basic explanation of what you need to do to complete assessment of a core class as an instructor.

If this is your first time doing it and you want the full spiel, expand and read the longer version.

Important Note: The information on this page is written for a very wide audience, but there are a few exceptions to some of the things I鈥檓 saying for certain core categories. You鈥檒l find notes specific to each category at the bottom of the page.

Thank you for teaching a course in the new Core! Everyone on the Core Committee recognizes and appreciates that teaching a Core course requires a little bit extra from instructors鈥攆rom applying for a Core designation to designing a new course or re-tooling an existing course. Because you鈥檝e made it this far, it probably comes as no surprise to you that assessment of the new Core is going to require a bit extra from you.

鈥淥kay, Todd, what do I need to do?鈥

You need to select an assignment (or multiple assignments) from your course that you can evaluate to see how well students did in meeting the learning goals for your core category. Once you鈥檝e selected your assignment(s) you鈥檒l need to fill out rubrics for each student鈥檚 work and submit the rubric scores to the Assessment Office along with electronic copies of the assignment and the student work.

鈥淭hat doesn鈥檛 sound too terrible, but I have a lot of questions.鈥

Sure, go ahead.

鈥淲hat are the learning goals for the different categories of Core classes?鈥

Just click on the link below to get a convenient summary of the learning goals for your category:

鈥淭hanks! What assignment or assignments do I choose?鈥

Each learning goal should be measured by at least one assignment in the course. It鈥檚 best to choose an assignment that comes after students have had a chance to do the learning, and, since we want them to do their best work, it should be probably be emphasized (either through your drawing attention to it or making it worth a substantial portion of their grade). Other institutions鈥檚 experiences suggest that students do better on assignments that seem worth spending time on. If you can measure multiple goals via the same assignment, that鈥檚 even better: setting fewer tasks for students allows them to focus their attention and energy. You may have heard in workshops or seen in some of the Core materials reference to a 鈥淪ignature Assignment鈥? That鈥檚 what we are talking about here: an assignment or a small set of assignments that allows for authentic assessment of multiple learning goals!

鈥淒idn鈥檛 I already list assignments on my core application?鈥

Probably so! In that case, this step is already done!

鈥淗mm鈥 Do I have to use the assignments I mentioned on my application?鈥

No. We understand that assignments may need to change between application and implementation. The only rule is that each of the learning goals must be measured by one assignment in the course. (Keep in mind that one assignment can measure more than one goal; in fact, in some cases, one assignment can measure all of the goals.) However, please consult the director of your core category early in the semester if you plan to depart significantly from the assignments listed in your application鈥損articularly if those changes involve replacing or omitting major assignments

鈥淣ow, what鈥檚 this about rubrics?鈥

Right. Those are available at these links:

鈥淪o, wait. Are you telling me how to grade their work?!?鈥

Absolutely not. It is completely up to you to decide how to grade student work in your class. It is your class after all. Notice that the version of the rubrics above have no points or letter grades assigned to them. While you are grading (or after鈥攚hichever works for you), you can also fill out the rubric. I need those scores鈥not the grade. We鈥檝e tried to keep the rubrics as simple as possible because we recognize the potential additional burden, especially for large classes.

鈥淲hy do you need the students鈥 work, anyway?鈥

We need the student work so that members of the various sub-committees of the core can provide an independent assessment of student learning.

鈥淪o how am I supposed to get the data and student work to you?鈥

The easiest way (highly recommended by the Core Committee) is to use Canvas.

鈥淏ut what if I don鈥檛 want to use Canvas?鈥

That鈥檚 fine. In the end, it鈥檚 your choice. I promise Canvas is easier, but I鈥檓 not going to make you use it.

鈥淥K, so what do I have to do if I don鈥檛 use Canvas?鈥

If you don鈥檛 use Canvas, there are two things you have to do:

First, you鈥檒l need to scan the student鈥檚 work for the assignment(s) you chose and either send the files to me (as .pdf files, please) or share them with me via Dropbox or Google Drive. Please let me know what course and section the papers are from, and please send a description of the assignment, preferably the instructions the students received.

Second, you鈥檒l need to create a spreadsheet to hold the rubric scores for every student in your class for each assignment. The instructions are .

鈥淲ell, maybe I鈥檒l give Canvas a try. I鈥檝e not really used it before and I鈥檓 only going to use it for this assessment stuff, ok?鈥

Great! There are only a few basic steps to follow. (Each of the basic steps links to a short document explaining what to do in detail with screenshots.)

  • Set-Up (Create an Assignment for each of the assignments you鈥檒l be submitting and link the appropriate Rubric to your Assignment).
  • Have the students submit their work in Canvas. () ()

鈥淎nything else I need to know about the students submitting the work?鈥

Actually, yes. The grading app inside of Canvas (SpreedGrader) cannot display files from the Office equivalents that come native to Macs (Pages, Numbers, and Keynote), which can make grading and assessment difficult. You may want to ask Mac-using students to 鈥淪ave As鈥︹ into a version that will work, either the Office versions (.docx, .xlsx, .pptx), plain text, or .pdf. (They are probably used to this request, honestly).

鈥淗ey, I need a rubric that isn鈥檛 in here.鈥

Well, you can ask me to build it for you, or you can follow the just-barely-more-complicated steps.

鈥淚鈥檝e used Canvas before, and I actually use it quite a bit. Will those same instructions work for me.鈥

Mostly. There are a very few situations where you鈥檒l need to follow the just-barely-more-complicated steps: the most common being that you want to use your own rubric for grading. Otherwise, the basic stepswill work!

鈥淪o what is this just-barely-more-complicated process?鈥

  • Set-Up (Create an Assignment for each of the assignments you鈥檒l be submitting, import the Outcomes into your course, and create a Rubric for each Assignment)
  • Have the students submit their work in Canvas. () ()

鈥淲hat if the student work I鈥檓 assessing can鈥檛 be uploaded to Canvas?鈥

You can still use Canvas to provide rubric scores if you want. If the assignment is done by hand or in some software external to Canvas, send me copies of the work as if you weren鈥檛 using Canvas. If the student鈥檚 鈥渨ork鈥 is ephemeral鈥攁 performance, say, or class participation over the course of the semester, I鈥檇 be glad to get a recording or work with you to determine the best means of documentation. If nothing else works, then we鈥檒l do without the student work.

鈥淲hat are the deadlines?鈥

For those following the basic steps, it鈥檚 best to have everything set up in Canvas before the assignment is due, but as long as you get it done enough time before the end of the semester that students have time to upload, you鈥檒l be OK.

For those following the just-barely-more-complicated steps, you need to have everything set up in Canvas before you start grading using your own rubric.

You should have the rubric scores completed and saved by no more than one week after grades are due for the semester in question.

鈥淲hat happens with all of this information (and the student work) after my class is over?鈥

In most cases, each year, I鈥檒l be providing the department or a group of instructors with some of the student work from the courses taught in recent years, which I will download from Canvas using its Outcomes system, and they will independently complete the rubric on the material. Then , they will review all of the instructor-provided scores and the sub-committee/department scores, looking for ways to improve student learning and the operation of the Core itself. Once the entire Core Committee has reviewed their findings, they will be made public and passed along to you along with any suggestions about improving student learning and Core operations.

Oh, and also, instructors will be invited to participate in the this work meetings. But you'll hear more about that later.

鈥淭hat seems like a lot of work.鈥

It could be. One way we are simplifying is having the sub-committees focus on a few learning goals each year, moving through them until all have been reviewed in a four-year cycle. We want instructors to provide scores and work for every learning goal each semester, but the sub-committees will be focusing their work by following this .

鈥淚鈥檓 having trouble getting something to work.鈥

Call or email me. I鈥檒l help you get it done. That鈥檚 why I鈥檓 here.

THE NOTES

If you鈥檝e already read all of this and just need a document or link, expand and read the shorter version.

The basic steps for using Canvas for Core Assessment:

  • Set-Up (Create an Assignment for each of the assignments you鈥檒l be submitting and link the appropriate Rubric to your Assignment).
  • Have the students submit their work in Canvas. () ()

Not Using Canvas?

  1. Scan the student鈥檚 work for the assignment(s) you chose and either send the files to me (as .pdf files, please) or share them with me via Dropbox or Google Drive. Please let me know what course and section the papers are from, and please send a description of the assignment, preferably the instructions the students received.
  2. Create a spreadsheet to hold the rubric scores for every student in your class for each assignment. The instructions are .

If you want to either split one rubric onto multiple assignments or use your own rubric for grading, please follow the just-barely-more-complicated steps:

  • Set-Up (Create an Assignment for each of the assignments you鈥檒l be submitting, import the Outcomes into your course, and create a Rubric for each Assignment)
  • Have the students submit their work in Canvas. () ()

Specific Information by Core Category (Learning Goals, Quick Guides, and Rubrics) can be found at the bottom of this webpage.

Important Note: The information on this page is written for a very wide audience, but there are a few exceptions to some of the things I鈥檓 saying for certain core categories. You鈥檒l find notes specific to each category at the bottom of the page.

The short version

You need to select an assignment (or multiple assignments) from your course that you can evaluate to see how well students did in meeting the learning goals for your core category. Once you鈥檝e selected your assignment(s) you鈥檒l need to fill out rubrics for each student鈥檚 work and submit the rubric scores to the Assessment Office along with electronic copies of the assignment and the student work.

Assignments

Each learning goal should be measured by at least one assignment in the course. It鈥檚 best to choose an assignment that comes after students have had a chance to do the learning, and, since we want them to do their best work, it should be probably be emphasized (either through your drawing attention to it or making it worth a substantial portion of their grade). Other institutions鈥檚 experiences suggest that students do better on assignments that seem worth spending time on. If you can measure multiple goals via the same assignment, that鈥檚 even better: setting fewer tasks for students allows them to focus their attention and energy. The assignments do not have to be the ones listed on the core application for this class.

Submitting data and student work via Canvas (preferred) for MOST USERS

There are only a few basic steps to follow. (Each of the basic steps links to a short document explaining what to do in detail with screenshots.)

  • Set-Up (Create an Assignment for each of the assignments you鈥檒l be submitting and link the appropriate Rubric to your Assignment).
  • Have the students submit their work in Canvas. () ()

Note: The grading app inside of Canvas (SpeedGrader) cannot display files from the Office equivalents that come native to Macs (Pages, Numbers, and Keynote), which can make grading and assessment difficult. You may want to ask Mac-using students to 鈥淪ave As鈥︹ into a version that will work, either the Office versions (.docx, .xlsx, .pptx), plain text, or .pdf. (They are probably used to this request, honestly).

If you need a rubric you aren鈥檛 seeing, just let me know鈥搕hey don鈥檛 take long to build.

Submitting data and student work via Canvas (preferred) for ADVANCED USERS

There are a very few situations where you鈥檒l need to follow the just-barely-more-complicated steps: the most common, being that you want to use your own rubric for grading.

  • Set-Up (Create an Assignment for each of the assignments you鈥檒l be submitting, import the Outcomes into your course, and create a Rubric for each Assignment)
  • Have the students submit their work in Canvas. () ()

Submitting data and student work outside of Canvas

  • Scan the student鈥檚 work for the assignment(s) you chose and either send the files to me (as .pdf files, please) or share them with me via Dropbox or Google Drive. Please let me know what course and section the papers are from, and please send a description of the assignment, preferably the instructions the students received.
  • Create a spreadsheet to hold the rubric scores for every student in your class for each assignment. The instructions are .

Even if you can鈥檛 or don鈥檛 want to have student upload their work, you can still use Canvas to provide rubric scores if you want. If the assignment is done by hand or in some software external to Canvas, send me copies of the work as if you weren鈥檛 using Canvas. If the student鈥檚 鈥渨ork鈥 is ephemeral鈥攁 performance, say, or class participation over the course of the semester, I鈥檇 be glad to get a recording or work with you to determine the best means of documentation. If nothing else works, then we鈥檒l do without the student work.

Deadlines

For those following the basic steps, it鈥檚 best to have everything set up in Canvas before the assignment is due, but as long as you get it done enough time before the end of the semester that students have time to upload, you鈥檒l be OK.

For those following the just-barely-more-complicated steps, you need to have everything set up in Canvas before you start grading using your own rubric.

You should have the rubric scores completed and saved by no more than one week after grades are due for the semester in question.

Learning Goals

Rubrics

THE NOTES