The Center for Engaged Teaching and Learning fosters excellence in teaching and learning at Mars Hill University by providing resources, enrichment opportunities, faculty development, and strategies that support quality and innovative instruction.
This tool is called start, stop, and continue: We suggest giving this about two weeks into the course and then again around midpoint.
Reflection and Feedback
Questions
Think about yourself and your learning in this course
1. Identify 1-2 things that you have been doing that support your learning
2. Identify 1-2 things that you have been doing that hinder your learning
3. Identify 1-2 suggestions you might adopt to improve your learning
ESSAY
Think about the course design, daily flow, and my teaching
1. Identify 1-2 things that support your learning
2. Identify 1-2 things that hinder your learning
3. Identify 1-2 suggestions that I integrate into the course to improve your learning
ESSAY
Think about your fellow classmates
1. Identify 1-2 things that your peers have been doing that support your learning
2. Identify 1-2 things that your peers have been doing that hinder your learning
3. Identify 1-2 suggestions your peers might adopt to improve your learning
ESSAY
4. Is there anything else you'd like me to know?
ESSAY
Adapted and based on the TAP from James Madison University
"Rubric" is the term applied to the most detailed and comprehensive of these assessment guides. In simple terms, a rubric shows how learners will be assessed and/or graded. In other words, a rubric provides a clear guide as to how "what learners do" in a course will be assessed.
Rubrics have many strengths:
Developing a Rubric
It is often easier to adapt a rubric that someone else has created, but if you are starting from scratch, here are some steps that might make the task easier:
General Resources:
Six Domains of the Rubric for Online Instruction
Transparency in Learning and Teaching Resources
Source Link: https://www.calstatela.edu/cetl/rubrics