Reimagining Online Assessment with Situated Cognition – A SALTISE Webinar
September 24 @ 14:30 – 16:00
Assessment Challenge Webinar Series F2021
Assessing student learning is a major challenge for teachers, those new to the profession and those well-seasoned in it. As a result of the pandemic and online teaching, many of us were forced to confront the limitations and challenges of the assessments we have been using. Many felt a deep frustration that has been purcortation for years, are our assessments accomplishing the job of truly assessing our students鈥 knowledge and skills? How might we change, modify, improve our assessments? Can we use assessment to support learning? Are our assessments sensitive to cultural diversity? How do we get to the holy grail of assessing real understanding 鈥 aka 鈥渢ransfer of learning鈥?
This semester (F2021) SALTISE has invited experts whose combined and ongoing work on the topic of assessment will provide important insights from both the research and practice of designing assessments. Our aim is to promote a rich discussion and reflection on the topic, which we hope will provide answers that allow us to move forward to more equitable and effective ways to assess our students鈥 learning.
Join us for this conversation as our invited experts share their knowledge of the topic. Learn from their experiences and take the opportunity to ask questions and engage with them.
Part 1, Reimagining Online Assessment with Situated Cognition.
So called 鈥渟ituative鈥 approaches to knowing and learning offer new solutions to enduring challenges that emerge when grading, assessing, and testing online learners
This webinar will be organized around a recent paper published in Distance Education. It described a comprehensive 鈥渕ulti-level鈥 approach to assessment that emerged over a decade of refinement in a range of online settings. Example online learning settings from panelists and attendees will be used to illustrate practical implications of the ten assessment design principles presented in the paper.
Presenter:
Dan Hickey is a professor at Indiana University, Bloomington, Learning Sciences Program. He is also a Research Scientist with the Center for Research on Learning and Technology and teaches in the Certificate in Assessment and Evaluation Methods (Online). He has a Ph.D. in Psychology, from Vanderbilt University, and Postdoctoral Fellowship, from ETS Center for Performance Assessment. His research interests include motivation, assessment, and supporting learning using technological innovations.