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Author Haugnes, Natasha, 1965- author.

Title Meaningful Grading : a Guide for Faculty in the Arts / Natasha Haugnes, Hoag Holmgren, and Martin Springborg.

Publication Info. Morgantown : West Virginia University Press, 2018.

Copies

Location Call No. Status
 Rocky Hill - Downloadable Materials  EBSCO Ebook    Downloadable
Rocky Hill cardholders click here to access this title from EBSCO
Edition First edition.
Description 1 online resource (203 pages) : illustrations
data file rda
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references.
Note Print version record.
Contents Intro; Contents; Introduction; Part I. Course Design and Preparation; 1. Quantifying the Qualitative; 2. Examining Aesthetic Sensibility; 3. The Apprenticeship of Observation; 4. Novices and Experts; 5. Getting Involved; 6. Implications of Grades; 7. Course Design: An Overview; 8. Course Design: Defining Goals; 9. Course Design: Teaching and Learning Activities; 10. Course Design: Assessment Criteria; 11. Your Grading System: Math Matters; 12. Ungraded Assignments; 13. Scaffolding Learning Tasks; 14. Soliciting Feedback; Part I. Supplementary Resources; Part II. During the Semester.
15. Making Grading Expectations Clear16. A Mutual Understanding of Progress; 17. Clarifying Teaching Methods; 18. Choice of Graded Projects; 19. Office Hours; 20. Making Creative Process Explicit; 21. Redefining Effort; 22. Problem Finding; 23. Generating Ideas and Brainstorming; 24. Aha! Moments; 25. Grading and Mistakes; 26. Contemplative Practice; 27. Famous Artists' Early Work; 28. The Artist-Apprentice Dynamic; 29. Grading Participation; 30. Grading Discussions; 31. Self-Assessment and Creative Process; 32. The Language of the Discipline; 33. Assessing Research.
34. Skills-Based Assignments35. Creating Rubrics; 36. Using Rubrics; 37. When to Introduce a Rubric; 38. Student-Generated Rubrics; 39. Rubrics for Peer and Self-Assessment; 40. Common Rubric Pitfalls; 41. Structuring the Critique; 42. Critiquing in the Online Environment; 43. Peer Critique; 44. Art Directing vs. Critiquing; 45. Critique Journals; Part II. Supplementary Resources; Part III. Post-semester; 46. Requesting Feedback on Your Grading; 47. Post-semester Community: Moving Beyond Assessment; 48. Reflecting and Planning for Next Semester; 49. End-of-Semester Evaluations.
50. Norming Your GradesPart III. Supplementary Resources; Acknowledgements; Notes.
Summary College and university faculty in the arts (visual, studio, language, music, design, and others) regularly grade and assess undergraduate student work but often with little guidance or support. As a result, many arts faculty, especially new faculty, adjunct faculty, and graduate student instructors, feel bewildered and must "reinvent the wheel" when grappling with the challenges and responsibilities of grading and assessing student work. Meaningful Grading: A Guide for Faculty in the Arts enables faculty to create and implement effective assessment methodologies--research based and field tested--in traditional and online classrooms. In doing so, the book reveals how the daunting challenges of grading in the arts can be turned into opportunities for deeper student learning, increased student engagement, and an enlivened pedagogy.
Subject Arts -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- Evaluation.
Grading and marking (Students)
Art students -- Rating of.
College students -- Rating of.
EDUCATION -- Organizations & Institutions.
EDUCATION -- Administration -- General.
College students -- Rating of. (OCoLC)fst00868035
Grading and marking (Students) (OCoLC)fst00945795
Genre/Form Electronic books.
Added Author Springborg, Martin, author.
Holmgren, Hoag, author.
Other Form: Print version: Haugnes, Natasha, 1965- Meaningful Grading. First edition. Morgantown : West Virginia University Press, 2018 9781946684486 1946684481 (DLC) 2018010255 (OCoLC)1028609904
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