Effective Grading
  Effective Grading: A Tool for Learning and Assessment Buy this book now at Barnes and
Noble
Walvoord, Barbara E., & Johnson,
Virginia A. (1998).
Effective grading: A tool for learning and
assessment. San
Francisco: Jossey-Bass.
Note: The book is divided into two main
parts. Since
the second part has more to do with institutional
rather than classroom assessment, I'll focus on the
first part.
Preface
Grading includes:
 | identifying
the most valuable kinds of learning in a course
|
 | constructing
tests and assignments that will test that learning
|
 | setting
standards and criteria
|
 | guiding
student learning
|
 | making
changes in teaching as a result of information
gained in the grading process
|
Chapter 1: The Power of Grading for
Learning and Assessment
Grading doesn't just refer to grades,
it refers to the process why which teachers assess
student learning, the context in which this occurs,
and the dialogue that the grading process engenders.
Grading serves multiple roles:
evaluation, communication, motivation, and
organization.
Assessment should:
 | answer
questions people care about
|
 | lead
to improvement in teaching and learning
|
 | be
embedded in the context of learning
|
 | take
place repeatedly over time
|
Assessment isn't just a fad, nor is it
just a classroom practice. It's a national agenda.
The "Age of Accountability" has
arrived for education.
Faculty have been doing assessment all
along in their classes, but often it's "stealth
assessment", not communicated with legislatures,
accrediting agencies, and other audiences.
PART
ONE: GRADING IN THE CLASSROOM
Chapter 2: Managing the Grading Process
Three False Hopes About Grading:
 | total
objectivity
|
 | total
agreement
|
 | one-dimensional
student motivation for learning
|
Ten Principles of Grading
- Appreciate
the complexity of grading as a context-dependent
and socially constructed system.
- Since
total objectivity is impossible, used informed
professional judgment when necessary.
- Know
how much time you have to spare for grading, and
distribute that time effectively.
- Be
open to changes in grading and be prepared to be
influenced by national trends in grading.
- Grades
mean different things to different students, so listen
to your students.
- The
grading process involves communication and
collaboration with students.
- Integrate
grading with other key processes like course
planning.
- Accept
that grading is an emotional issue and use that
emotion to "seize teachable moments".
- Focus
on student learning---it, not grading, is your
primary goal.
- True,
teachers function as gatekeepers, but be a
teacher first.
Chapter 3: Making Assignments Worth Grading
From the first moments you being
planning your course, plan your grading.
Six Suggestions
- Given
that you don't have time for students to learn
everything about the topics, deeply consider what
is most important for them to learn.
From this, formulate course goals and
objectives.
- Select
your assessments with an eye to what you value
most (since grading is one of the most
labor-intensive things you do, why waste it on
things that aren't important to you?). For
example, don't say you value analysis, synthesis,
and evaluation and then proceed to test over basic
facts and concepts.
- Construct
a course outline that is assignment centered,
asking not "what should I cover?" but
"what should they learn to do?"
Make your class do beyond students' taking
notes, studying the night before an exam, and
regurgitating the "right" answers on a
test.
- Review
assessments for "fit and feasibility'--that
is, do assignments fit your objectives and is the
workload feasible for both you and your students?
- Set
goals through a process of collaboration with
students.
- Make
sure that the instructions for your assessments
are clear to students; otherwise, students will
define assignments differently and confound
efforts to measure learning goals.
Chapter 4: Fostering Motivation and Learning in the Grading
Process
Every class has a motivational
structure---does yours serve learning?
Involvement
 | Aim
for student involvement; i.e., students putting
physical and psychological energy into your
course.
|
 | What's
the goal of involvement?
To help students achieve more than they
could on their own.
|
 | Both
student-faculty and student-student interaction
are powerful factors in student involvement.
|
Make sure that students practice skills
rather than just memorizing information.
Consider the different motivations of
"grade-oriented" vs. "learning
oriented" students.
Two Suggestions
1) Teach what you are grading:
"teaching to the test" gets a bad rap.
But if the test measures what's truly
important, you should be teaching to the test…or at
least "…to the criteria by which you will
evaluate the test."
2) Rethink the use of class time and
devote as much class time as you can to
process-oriented learning.
Techniques exist to get students to perform
assigned readings before class (e.g., homework =
writing short summary or opinion paper on readings).
Then, more class time can be used to engage
students in activities that help them process
the material. Additionally,
rather than expending valuable time outside the class
commenting on students' work, "the class itself
can be the teacher's way of responding to the
students' preparatory work".
Example
Many teachers find that even if
students do the readings, they don't do them well.
To help students do a more effective job, give
them specific guides to use or tasks to accomplish. For
example, one physics professor videotaped himself
engaging in the process of reading physics problems in
the textbook and working out their solutions.
Students had to view and respond to the
videotapes and read the book before class, freeing up
class time in which they, in groups of three, finished
their homework problems.
Chapter 5: Establishing Criteria and
Standards for Grading
Benefits:
 | saves
time
|
 | makes
grading fairer and more consistent
|
 | makes
expectations clear
|
 | helps
you identify what to teach
|
 | identifies
essential relationships among content
|
 | makes
students participants in their own learning
|
 | saves
you from having to repeat yourself over and over
|
 | helps
students help each other
|
 | helps
teaching assistants or co-teachers
|
 | provides
a solid foundation for class and institutional
evaluation
|
Primary Trait Analysis (PTA)
(Lloyd-Jones, 1977)
 | Primary
trait analysis involves stating a teacher's
criteria through the use of assignment-specific
rubrics. Each
rubric includes the factors or traits that
contribute to scoring along with explicit scoring
scales and instructions. Students' PTAs can be
used for all, part, or none of the assignment
grade.
|
 | Note
that such an approach provides far more evaluation
data than a simple numerical grade; what's more,
this information can be tracked over time.
|
Chapter 6: Calculating Course Grades
Calculating course grades isn't just a
mathematical formula---it's an expression of your
values and goals.
Grading Models
1) Weighted Letter Grades: different
assignments are given different weights.
Assumes that different types of assignments
measure different things, have different judging
criteria, and are differently
valued.
2) Accumulated Points: grades are
allocated according to the cumulative total of points
for all assignments. Assumes that good or poor performance in one area can be
offset by performance in other areas (which can also
allow students to decide how to allocate their
effort). It
also is more forgiving in that it allows students to
make up poor performance early in the course.
3) Definitional System: to get a given
grade, students must meet or exceed standards (e.g., a
certain percentage of "pass" in pass/fail
grading).
Penalties and Extra Credit
 | Any
of the above grading systems can be modified with
penalties (e.g., for late work or failing to cite
sources properly) and/or extra credit.
|
 | Keep
in mind, though, that penalties are perceived
negatively and may produce negative emotions and
interactions.
|
 | Extra
credit can be used to let students compensate for
poor performance in one area by extra work in
another.
|
Developmental vs. Unit-Based
a) Developmental: later work is
weighted more heavily than earlier work, leaving room
for slow starts and early failures.
b) Unit-based: course is divided into
units and each unit counts the same as the others.
Less forgiving of slow starts and early
failures.
Contract Learning
Contract learning uses negotiations to
draw students into the learning process. In doing so,
It makes the contractual nature of grading explicit.
It also increases both student choice and
responsibility and can produce more student "buy
in".
Curving
1) Grading on a Curve:
forces a certain percentage of students to
receive each grade.
The authors consider such a system harmful to
learning and advocate either allowing more student to
earn higher grades or controlling the number of
"As" by raising standards.
Chapter 7: Communicating With Students
About Their Grades
A grade isn't just an evaluation---it's
a communication.
Suggestions for Effective Communication
 | assume
that students want to learn
|
 | set
high expectations but assist students in reaching
them
|
 | make
the connection between your course goals and your
tests and assignments explicit (begin doing this
in the syllabus)
|
 | remind
students about course goals, inquire how well they
believe they are meeting them, and provide
assignments that make students reflect on how
events in the course serve course goals.
|
 | discuss
your grading philosophy with your students
|
 | discuss
your notions of fairness with your students
|
 | clearly
explain what is meant by each level of grade
|
 | when
students make errors, focus on the learner rather
than the error
|
 | whenever
comments won't make a difference, save them for
the teachable moment
|
 | focus
students on global feedback first before they
begin making local corrections
|
 | avoid
springing surprises on students
|
Grades and Evaluations
Can teachers "buy" better
student evaluations by making their courses easier?
Research suggests no.
Chapter 8: Making Grading More
Time-Efficient
Strategies for Efficiency
1) Separate commenting from grading:
grades need not be given for all work, and
comments need not be written on all work.
Save each for where it will have the greatest
effect on learning.
2) Do not give grades on an assignment
just because a few students get antsy if their work
isn't graded (you might, however, offer to give
"informal" grades to these few students).
3) Use only as many grade levels as you
need: often,
no one says you have to give plus and minus grades (or
even grades---you could use pass/fail).
4) Consider whether comments will have
the desired effect (often, students focus less on
higher-level development and more on
"fixing" the assignment to give the teacher
what he/she wants).
If comments won't result in change, save them
for teachable moments.
5) If student work is careless, don't
waste your time---make them redo it before you spend
your time offering feedback.
6) Use what students know about their
own work (e.g., if a student already knows it's
unfocused, you could waste a lot of time going on at
length about how it's unfocused!).
7) Ask students to organize their work
in ways that aid your efficiency:
e.g., provide checklists,
require tables of contents, and ban paper
clips.
8) When possible, delegate.
For example, could some of the grading you do
be replaced by peer evaluation using rubrics?
Chapter 9: Using the Grading Process to
Improve Teaching
(presents two case studies)
STOP
PART
TWO: HOW GRADING SERVES BROADER ASSESSMENT PURPOSES
Chapter 10: Determining Faculty
Performance, Rewards, and Incentives
Chapter 11: Strengthening Departmental
and Institutional Assessment
Chapter 12: A Case Study of Grading as
a Tool for Assessment
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