Choices


Primary Trait
      Analysis

Assessment vs.
      Grades

Inventory of
      Teaching Goals

Using Anonymous
      Assessments

Directed
      Paraphrasing

Goal Ranking &
      Matching

The Muddiest Point

The Minute Paper

Self Assessment

Self Confidence
      Survey

Characteristic
      Features Matrix

Background
      Knowledge Probe

RSQC2

Active Learning

Transfer & Apply

Grading Standards

Rubric for Grading
      Standards

Rubric for Student
      Participation

Guided
Essay

The GIFT:
      Classroom Interviews

What Students
      Want in a Professor

Assessment of
      Group Work

Assessing
      Group Effectivness

Effective Study Time

SIUE Logo

Classroom Assessment Techniques

Purple Button To SIUE Assessment Home Page

Seven Principles for Good Practice in Undergraduate Education

  1. Encourages contact between students and faculty

  2. Develops reciprocity and cooperation among students

  3. Encourages active learning

  4. Gives prompt feedback on performance

  5. Emphasizes time on task

  6. Communicates high expectations

  7. Respects diverse talents and ways of learning

    ----A.W. Chickering & Z.F. Gamson, 1987. AAHE.
"Classroom Assessment is a simple method faculty can use to collect feedback, early and often, on how well their students are learning what they are being taught. The purpose of classroom assessment is to provide faculty and students with information and insights needed to improve teaching effectiveness and learning quality. College instructors use feedback gleaned through Classroom Assessment to inform adjustments in their teaching. Faculty also share feedback with students, using it to help them improve their learning strategies and study habits in order to become more independent, successful learners.... Classroom Assessment is one method of inquiry within the framework of Classroom Research, a broader approach to improving teaching and learning."

----Angelo, T.A., 1991. Ten easy pieces: Assessing higher learning in four dimensions. In Classroom research: Early lessons from success. New directions in teaching and learning (#46), Summer, 17-31.

"Why do we insist on measuring it with a micrometer when we mark it with chalk and cut it with an axe?"
---Peter Ewell

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