嵌入学生形成性报告,促进学生元认知和教师教学调整

M. Richards-Babb
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引用次数: 0

摘要

及时的、形成性的反馈对教师和学生都很重要。在这个项目中,“嵌入式学生”通过匿名报告向教师提供形成性反馈。在2022年秋季参加预备化学课程部分的学生自行选择提交报告,记录他们在学习化学内容方面的持续经验。嵌入式学生记录了大约(i)投入课程的小时数;(ii)特定主题的内容掌握,舒适,和混乱;(三)教师教学法。每周平均有108份报告是匿名的,并与教师分享。教师的努力仅限于同意接受每周报告,查看它们,并可能使用它们来通知即将到来的教学。嵌入式学生受益于思考他们在课堂上的学习(元认知),并将他们的学习集中在即将到来的一周。总体而言,300名不同的学生提交了1513份周报,平均每周自述的听课时间为2.81小时,每周自述的课外学习时间为4.75小时,每周自述的课程总时间为7.56小时。教师们报告说,他们阅读了超过87%的报告,并利用反馈平均进行了4.6次教学调整,包括在困难的概念上做额外的练习题,提供额外问题的答案,实施解决问题/复习日,以及复习课程早期的困难材料或内容。指导员表示,每周报告有助于“指导员慈善”。学生们“感觉被倾听了”,尤其是当教师明确地、建设性地处理每周报告中的评论时。这项工作得到了nsf资助的First2网络的部分支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Embedded student formative reporting to promote student metacognition and instructor pedagogical adjustments
Timely, formative feedback is important for instructors and students. In this project, “embedded students” provided instructors with formative feedback through anonymized reports. Students enrolled in preparatory chemistry course sections in fall 2022 self-selected to submit reports documenting their ongoing experiences in learning chemistry content. Embedded students journaled about (i) hours devoted to the course; (ii) topic-specific content mastery, comfort, and confusion; and (iii) instructor pedagogy. An average of 108 reports per week were anonymized and shared with instructors. Instructor effort was limited to agreeing to receive the weekly reports, look them over, and potentially use them to inform upcoming teaching. Embedded students benefited by thinking about their learning in the class (metacognition) and focusing their learning for the upcoming week. Overall, 300 distinct students submitted 1,513 weekly reports, with overall means of 2.81 hours per week of self-reported time devoted to attending lecture, 4.75 hours per week of self-reported time engaged in additional study, and 7.56 hours per week of self-reported total time devoted to the course. Instructors reported reading over 87% of the reports and using feedback to make an average of 4.6 instructional adjustments ranging from working additional practice problems on difficult concepts, providing answer keys to extra problems, implementing problem-solving/review days, and reviewing difficult material or content from earlier in the course. Instructors indicated that the weekly reports contributed to “instructor beneficence”. Students “felt heard” especially when instructors explicitly and constructively addressed comments from the weekly reports. This work is partially supported by the NSF-funded First2 Network.
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