[Saltassessmentworkinggroup] Status onScholarship Projectsinvolving student learning assessments
Deborah Post
DEBORAHP at tourolaw.edu
Mon Aug 2 09:42:57 CDT 2010
Andi, did a grade curve apply in this case? Was there a median or mean that
meant raw scores had to be sorted and placed in particular letter grades?
And was there a control group?
Deborah
Professor Deborah Waire Post
Touro Law Center
225 Eastview Drive
Central Islip, New York 11722
(631) 761-7137 (office)
deborahp at tourolaw.edu
________________________________
From: saltassessmentworkinggroup-bounces at lists.washlaw.edu on behalf of Andi
Curcio
Sent: Mon 02-Aug-10 7:31 AM
To: saltassessmentworkinggroup at lists.washlaw.edu; Hazel Weiser
Cc: kimberly.pray at gmail.com
Subject: Re: [Saltassessmentworkinggroup] Status onScholarship
Projectsinvolving student learning assessments
Along with a colleague from the business school I have completed a study on
the impact of formative assessments on Evidence students' [Fall semester 2Ls]
final exam scores. Our article about the study and its results has been
accepted by the Journal of Legal Ed. Below is the abstract we sent along
with the article.
_________
ABSTRACT
Much has been written about the need to move from a single end-of-semester
law school exam to a formative assessment system that gives students on-going
feedback. However, few have examined whether this kind of feedback has a
verifiable advantage for law students. This study demonstrates that formative
assessments can be implemented with minimal professorial time and effort and
that the on-going feedback these assessments provide produces a quantifiable
difference in law student final exam performance. Using a short essay/short
answer exam format, the study discusses how a series of un-graded quizzes and
a graded mid-term, all accompanied by model answers, grading rubrics and
self-reflective exercises, resulted in a significant final exam performance
score increase for 70% of the students receiving the feedback interventions
in a large-section required second-year Evidence course.
________
Those on this list might be interested in the fact that our results are
similar to what colleagues and I found in an earlier study with first year
students and an essay exam format - LSAT score & UGPA factored into whether
students derived a benefit from the formative assessments. In the earlier
study, the benefit only inured to those with above-the-median LSAT scores or
UGPAs. In this study, the benefit reached approximately 70% of the students
- again those with the top 70% of LSAT scores & UGPAs. However, this study
involved second year students and we also had LGPA [law school grade point
average]. Interestingly, because LSAT score and UPGA did not correlate with
LGPA, we found that some students with below the median LGPA also benefited
from the practice exams & mid-term & accompanying feedback.
BTW, my collaborator, Carol Sargent, is one of the potential social science
collaborators on the SALT list. She's a crackerjack and if others need a
social science collaborator, I'd highly recommend getting in touch with her.
Thanks to Hazel for getting the discussion going. If others have done or are
considering doing studies about various assessments, please use this list as
a sounding board.
Hope all have had a great summer.
Take care,
Andi
>>> "Hazel Weiser" <hweiser at saltlaw.org> 07/30/10 11:14 AM >>>
We hope that everyone's summer is that perfect combination of relaxing and
productive! SALT is interested in finding out what projects are moving
forward involving student learning assessments. Who is working on these
issues? How far have you gotten? Has anyone drafted a piece for peer
review? Has anyone published? Please let me know if there has been some
progress. The Standards Review Committee, as you might know, has been
dealing with these issues.
Thank you.
Hazel Weiser, Executive Director
Society of American Law Teachers -- SALT
Public Advocacy Center, Room 223
Touro Law Center
225 Eastview Drive
Central Islip, NY 11722
hweiser at saltlaw.org
631.650.2310
Explore our website: www.saltlaw.org
Check out our new blog: http://www.saltlaw.org/blog
SALT Teaching Conference: December 10-11, 2010 in Hawai'i
a community of progressive law teachers working for justice, diversity, and
academic excellence
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