Student perceptions and use of an assessment rubric for a group concept map in physiology

2008 ◽  
Vol 32 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger W. Moni ◽  
Karen B. Moni

We previously reported how the opinions of second-year dentistry students and faculty members can be used to construct an assessment rubric to grade group-based concept maps in physiology ( 14 ). This article describes the second phase of this study of the subsequent year's cohort. A case study approach was used to investigate how groups of students used the criteria to complete their complex concept maps. Students' opinions about the assessment task and newly constructed rubric were sampled. Opinions across groups were correlated to academic achievements in the course. Two groups of four students volunteered to be videorecorded during a 4-h workshop, during which they completed their maps. The mapping task was not generally favored by students. However, those students who did favor the task achieved higher academic grades. Most students favored the newly constructed assessment rubric, commenting that it was easy to understand, fair, and appropriate, but reported that extra guidance from tutors and other resources were required. Coded videorecordings of the two observation groups revealed complex interactions around the three criteria of content, logic and understanding, and presentation. Two broad patterns of working were identified. One group distributed their efforts more evenly across the criteria, whereas the other group completed their maps by addressing the criteria in stages. These findings clearly indicate the academic challenges and social complexity in how students work in groups to complete complex concept maps in physiology.

2005 ◽  
Vol 29 (4) ◽  
pp. 197-203 ◽  
Author(s):  
Roger W. Moni ◽  
Eileen Beswick ◽  
Karen B. Moni

Constructing quality assessment rubrics can be challenging, especially when they are used for integrated, group-centered, applied learning. We describe a collaborative assessment task in which groups of second-year dentistry students developed a complex concept map. In groups of four, the students were given a written, simulated, medical history of a patient and required to construct a concept map illustrating relevant pathophysiological concepts and pharmacological interventions. This report describes a research project aimed at making educational goals of the task more explicit through investigating student and faculty member understandings of the criteria that might be used to assess the concept map. Information was gathered about the perceptions of students in relation to the learning goals associated with the task. These were compared with faculty member perceptions. The findings were used to develop an assessment rubric intended to be more accessible to learners. The new rubric used the language of both faculty members and students to more clearly represent expectations of each criterion and standard. This assessment rubric will be used in 2005 for the next phase of the project.


Pythagoras ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 42 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Methuseli Moyo ◽  
France M. Machaba

Our research with Grade 9 learners at a school in Soweto was conducted to explore learners’ understanding of fundamental fraction concepts used in applications required at that level of schooling. The study was based on the theory of constructivism in a bid to understand whether learners’ transition from whole numbers to rational numbers enabled them to deal with the more complex concept of fractions. A qualitative case study approach was followed. A test was administered to 40 learners. Based on their written responses, eight learners were purposefully selected for an interview. The findings revealed that learners’ definitions of fraction were neither complete nor precise. Particularly pertinent were challenges related to the concept of equivalent fractions that include fraction elements, namely the numerator and denominator in the phase of rational number. These gaps in understanding may have originated in the early stages of schooling when learners first conceptualised fractions during the late concrete learning phase. For this reason, we suggest a developmental intervention using physical manipulatives to promote understanding of fractions before inductively guiding learners to construct algorithms and transition to the more abstract applications of fractions required in Grade 9.


Author(s):  
Päivi Immonen-Orpana ◽  
Mauri Åhlberg

Collaborative Learning by Developing (LbD) was researched in a University course. The focus was reflective metacognitive competence development (Appendix 1.) of Physiotherapy students. The authors used both individual and collaborative concept mapping and improved Vee heuristics in learning process evaluation. The content of the design experiment was ‘Coping at Home’. As educational research it was a design experiment, a multi-case, multi-method study. The core concept of the study unit and development project was ‘successful aging’. Both Cmap Recorder and videotaping of discussions during group concept mapping were used. The main result was that plenty of face-to-face dialogue was needed before the shared understanding and group concept maps were created. First the main concepts were fixed and then other concepts and their relationships were elaborated. Differences between individuals and two groups are analysed. In the collaborative learning process, the feeling in both groups was as if they had a unified and shared thinking process. Students continued each others talking and thinking very fluently like they had had “common brains”.


2015 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
pp. ar39 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jason E. Dowd ◽  
Tanya Duncan ◽  
Julie A. Reynolds

A pervasive notion in the literature is that complex concept maps reflect greater knowledge and/or more expert-like thinking than less complex concept maps. We show that concept maps used to structure scientific writing and clarify scientific reasoning do not adhere to this notion. In an undergraduate course for thesis writers, students use concept maps instead of traditional outlines to define the boundaries and scope of their research and to construct an argument for the significance of their research. Students generate maps at the beginning of the semester, revise after peer review, and revise once more at the end of the semester. Although some students revised their maps to make them more complex, a significant proportion of students simplified their maps. We found no correlation between increased complexity and improved scientific reasoning and writing skills, suggesting that sometimes students simplify their understanding as they develop more expert-like thinking. These results suggest that concept maps, when used as an intervention, can meet the varying needs of a diverse population of student writers.


2015 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Lina Nashihatun Nafidah

AbstractAsean Economic Community (AEC) will soon be opened, ASEAN countries have signed the treaty. This is a golden opportunity for every country that has prepared well, but also will be pain for countries that do not or less to prepare for such cooperation. If the AEC materialize in 2015, it is certain that will open employment opportunities as possible for citizens of ASEAN. For Indonesia, the competency of the workforce is generally derived from the development of special skills in a particular field through a college education. This study aims to determine students' knowledge of accounting STIE PGRI Dewantara Jombang against imposing AEC and its implications as well as their readiness in the face of AEC. This type of research used in this research is qualitative research using case study approach with descriptive method using primary data obtained through questionnaires. Respondents in this study are students of accounting STIE PGRI Dewantara Jombang. The survey results revealed mostly already know about the implementation of the Asean Economic Community (AEC), but they do not know the consequences of the implementation of the AEC.Keywords: Student Perceptions, Economic Integration, Employment & Ecomonic Asean Community (AEC AbstrakAsean Economic Community (AEC) akan segera dibuka, negara-negara ASEAN telah menandatangani perjanjian tersebut. Hal ini merupakan kesempatan emas bagi setiap negara yang telah mempersiapkan diri dengan baik, namun juga bakal menjadi derita bagi negara-negara yang tidak kunjung atau kurang mempersiapkan diri menghadapi kerjasama tersebut. Apabila AEC terwujud pada tahun 2015, maka dapat dipastikan akan terbuka kesempatan kerja seluas-luasnya bagi warga negara ASEAN. Bagi Indonesia, kompetensi yang dimiliki para tenaga kerja umumnya diperoleh dari pengembangan kemampuan khusus dalam bidang tertentu melalui pendidikan di perguruan tinggi. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui pengetahuan mahasiswa akuntansi STIE PGRI Dewantara Jombang terhadap pemberlakuan AEC dan implikasinya serta kesiapan mereka dalam menghadapi AEC. Jenis penelitian yang digunakan dalam penelitian ini penelitian kualitatif menggunakan pendekatan studi kasus dengan metode deskriptif dengan menggunakan data primer yang diperoleh melalui kuesioner. Responden dalam penelitian ini yaitu mahasiswa program studi akuntansi STIE PGRI Dewantara Jombang. Dari hasil penelitian diketahui sebagian besar sudah mengetahui tentang pemberlakuan Asean Economic Community (AEC) akan tetapi mereka belum mengetahui konsekuensi dari pemberlakuan AEC.Keywords : Persepsi Mahasiswa, Integrasi Ekonomi, Kesempatan Kerja & Asean Ecomonic Community (AEC)


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sabrina E. Halberg ◽  
Amanda J. Visek ◽  
Emily F. Blake ◽  
Kofi D. Essel ◽  
Jennifer Sacheck ◽  
...  

Excess sugary drink (SD) consumption is associated with childhood obesity and development of cardiometabolic disease. In addition to having high added sugar content, many SDs also contain caffeine, which may further encourage excess SD consumption among children. The objective of this study was to develop a conceptual framework of children's caffeinated SD consumption using group concept mapping, an applied social research multimethodology that collectively harnesses qualitative and quantitative data from participants to generate a visual representation of their ideas and input. Children, 8–14 years old, who reported consuming ≥12 ounces of caffeinated SDs (e.g., sodas, sweet teas) per day were recruited throughout Washington, D.C. and invited to participate. Concept mapping included three participant-driven activities: (1) brainstorming (n = 51), during which children reported reasons for their SD consumption, from which 58 unique reasons were identified; (2) sorting (n = 70), during which children sorted each of the reported reasons into categories and named each category; and (3) rating (n = 74), during which children rated the influence of each reason on their own caffeinated SD consumption. Similarity matrices, multidimensional scaling, and hierarchical cluster analysis were used to generate concept maps (hereafter “SODA MAPS”), which display the 58 reasons organized within eight overarching clusters. Among these eight clusters, Taste and Feel, Something to Do, and Energy were rated as particularly influential. Children's caffeinated SD consumption is encouraged not only by the palatable taste and reported preferences for these beverages (e.g., Taste and Feel), but also by psychological (e.g., Mood and Focus), biological (e.g., Energy), social (e.g., Something to Do) and environmental reasons (e.g., Nothing Better Available). Thus, the SODA MAPS can inform the development of tailored, multi-level SD reduction interventions that incorporate strategies to address important and currently overlooked reasons for caffeinated SD consumption among children.


2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 207-221
Author(s):  
Inna N. Erofeeva ◽  
Tatiana I. Popova

The article is devoted to the topical problem of modern principles of developing tests of Russian as a foreign language (RFL), taking into account the world experience. The purpose of the article is to summarize the modern principles of language test development and to show how they are implemented in the new tests of Russian as a foreign language. The materials of the article include the research papers of Russian and foreign authors in the sphere of methodology over the past 20 years, as well as modern formats of testing in foreign languages. At the first stage of the study, general scientific methods of generalization, systematization and structuring were used. At the second phase, a new format of the RFL test Reading and Use of Language (B2) was modelled, combining language and communication competence testing. At the third stage, an experiment was conducted to test the new format. 48 foreign master students studying the program Russian Language and Russian Culture in the Aspect of Russian as a Foreign Language in Saint Petersburg State University took part in the experiment. It was concluded that the modern language test, in accordance with the basic cognitive and communicative principle of learning and control, should be based on the following principles: testing skills in different types of speech activities mainly on the text material; interdependence between the type of the task and the speech genre of the text being created/used in the task; basing on a linguistic and didactic description of the communicative competence level; integrative approach; using different types of test tasks within one subtest; the principle of increasing complexity of tasks; taking into account the complexity of each task in its assessment; task feasibility according to students educational level; taking into account the values of the multicultural world; taking into account international experience; basing on reliability and validity criteria of test tasks. These principles implemented in the new TORFL-II subtest format Reading and Use of Language are presented in the article. The implementation of modern test principles should ensure that all speech control facilities are systematically allocated to the appropriate level and parameters for their assessment. The above-mentioned principles of test creation and the example of their implementation can be taken as the basis of a full-fledged system of control and measurement materials based on linguistic and didactical descriptions of each level.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (3) ◽  
pp. 323-330
Author(s):  
Moh. Agus Suhartono ◽  
Tehubijuluw Zacharias ◽  
Faizal Madya

The purpose of the study was to analyze the identification of the process in the SWOT strategy which was carried out in improving employee performance appraisal, at the Karel Sadsuitubun Airport Organizing Unit office. This research is qualitative research with a focused case study approach. Data was collected through in-depth open interviews, observation, and documentation. The data analysis technique is limited by using SWOT analysis (Strength, Weaknesses, Opportunities, and Threats Analysis) so that the structure and strategic level of these factors can be known. From the results of data presentation and data analysis, it can be concluded that the performance appraisal of officers at Karel Sadsuitubun Airport has referred to the applicable regulations and in terms of improving Leadership Competence in carrying out the assessment, it is carried out through training or workshops.Keywords: Evaluation, Process, Assessment, Task Achievement


Author(s):  
Philip Crowther ◽  
Andrew Scott ◽  
Tom Allen

This chapter presents a case study of a large common first year unit/subject in a major Australian university. The unit introduces students to the theory and practice of design through a learning environment that is brief and intense; being delivered in block mode over just four days, and being free of other academic commitments. Students choose from one of two concurrent environments, either a camping field trip or an on-campus alternative, and work in mixed discipline groups of six to nine students, on two sequential design projects. Participant survey and reflective journal data are used to analyse student perceptions of the learning activities and to establish the pedagogical success of learning about collaboration through the act of collaborating; specifically through a project-based design environment. The data supports the hypothesis that groups that emotionally engaged with collaboration and collaborated more effectively achieved higher academic grades.


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