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When it comes to assessment, numbers are nonsense!

conference contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Tony ChalkleyTony Chalkley
As professors and tutors have traditionally had almost total control over the learning and assessment environment, for most students, the approach to assessment has changed little. The arrival of ‘new media’, ‘digital culture’ and ‘dispersed learning’ threatens this stability and control. Students are now able to operate in a more open, collaborative, interactive and distributed manner, and this fact challenges many of the traditional perceptions about what constitutes a ‘university experience’ and what are now ‘appropriate’ assessment tasks (Crisp, G,. 2009). Plagiarism is now part of daily life, wiki-referencing barely raises an eyebrow and now, custom written essays are seen as a very real option for the time poor student.
This paper will do three things. Firstly, to argue that allocating a numeric score to assessment is nonsense and secondly, tell a story about the authors experience when buying a custom written essay and finally, attempt to argue how ‘progressive and innovative’ assessment techniques might be used to remedy these assessment problems.

History

Event

SUNY Fredonia Teaching and Learning Conference (5th : 2011 : Fredonia, New York)

Pagination

1 - 44

Publisher

The State University of New York, Fredonia

Location

Fredonia, New York

Place of publication

Fredonia, N.Y.

Start date

2011-08-15

Language

eng

Publication classification

L3.1 Extract of paper (minor conferences)

Copyright notice

2011, SUNY

Title of proceedings

Proceedings of the 5th SUNY Fredonia Annual Teaching and Learning Conference : Creating Community : Collaborative Learning and Technologies

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