Feedback and assessment:
Feedback and assessment methods in higher education are important since they play a key role not only in immediate learning requirements and the certification of students’ achievement, but in preparing students for the learning in their life and work after graduation (Young and Perovic, 2015).
On the first day of the meeting, we had an attention-grabbing presentation about recording feedback for students’ assignments. The technique sounded unique and interesting to me. However, I believe pros and cons of this approach should be scrutinized. As far as I understood, recorded feedback is a way to explain more the written comments. Therefore, the feedback is presented double in different ways and could be very time taking for the courses with many assignments. Nevertheless, this could be useful for a thesis supervision where the student has to work deeply on the subject and usually comes up with many questions. Then, the recorded feedback can help student to understand the suggestions better and make the process of writing and finalizing the thesis faster since a thesis draft would usually exchange between the student and supervisor several times. There is no doubt the feedback contributes largely in learning and achievement, and the type of feedback and the way it is given can influence its impact (Hattie and Timperley, 2007), therefore, the recorded feedback needs further consideration to identify under what circumstances it can be more effective on learning and achievement.
Workshops:
On the meeting 3, we participated in two workshops. First was related to the project Rethink: KAU, where it “finds, develops and tests digital tools that give students better opportunities to complete their education”. This workshop was a good idea to involve both student and staffs in thinking and developing digital tools to help students to succeed with their learning. Different tools were suggested and presented in the workshop that some were very interesting. This type of digital tools can be developed and used not only in university-scale but also in course-scale to assist in providing the same opportunities for students in their education. I am so keen to follow the results and developed tools thorough the project Rethink: KAU and possibly to use them in my future courses.
The second workshop, ABC learning design, was a great experience for course development through a rapid-design method, developed by Young and Perovic (2015). I found the method quite practical for early career lecturers who are going to build new courses and programmes at their department as well as for those who are interested in changing a traditional course to an online or a blended format. Although I am not a main lecturer for any courses at KAU, getting familiar with these kinds of methods and how to use them to develop programmes will be very helpful for my future career, as I would love to keep working in academia, especially as a university lecturer.
References
David Boud, D., Falchikov, N. 2006. Aligning assessment with long‐term learning, Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education 31: 399-413.
Hattie, J., Timperley, H. 2007. The Power of Feedback. Review of Educational Research 77: 81–112.
Young, C., Perovic, N. 2015. ABC Leaning Design method. Resources available from http://blogs.ucl.ac.uk/abc-ld/.