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Krzic, Maja; Brown, Sandra – Natural Sciences Education, 2022
The transition of our large ([approximately]300 student) introductory soil science course to the online setting created several challenges, including engaging first- and second-year students, providing meaningful hands-on learning activities, and setting up online exams. The objective of this paper is to describe the development and use of…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Social Sciences, Online Courses, Educational Change
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Sukhodolsky, Jacob – International Journal of Computer Science Education in Schools, 2017
The problem of Computer Science students' cheating in their homework assignments so far has been handled mainly through administrative punishment of the cheaters. The success of such an approach depends to a large degree on the ability of the instructor to recognize the fact of cheating, which is a complicated task. With a large number of students…
Descriptors: Cheating, Computer Science Education, Programming, Grading
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Selbach-Allen, Megan E.; Greenwald, Sarah J.; Ksir, Amy E.; Thomley, Jill E. – PRIMUS, 2020
In this paper, we compare and contrast our experiences in using standards-based grading in different courses and across two separate institutions to explore the related tradeoffs and subtleties in designing and implementing such grading systems, guided by innovation diffusion theory. We summarize our individual courses, use Linda Nilson's criteria…
Descriptors: Grading, Standards, Evaluation Methods, College Faculty
Erickson, Jeffrey A. – Principal Leadership, 2011
At a very early age, students learn the point system and how school can be about the accumulation of points, not the accumulation of knowledge and skills. Grading systems are pervasive in districts across the nation, with questionable results. For example, a southern school district was highlighted in a 2009 Associated Press story for selling test…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Grading, Teaching Methods, Educational Change
Suskind, Dorothy – Phi Delta Kappan, 2012
The author says it's not enough just to have less homework or even better homework. We should change the fundamental expectation in our schools so that students are asked to take schoolwork home only when there's a reasonable likelihood that a particular assignment will be beneficial to most of them. The bottom line: No homework except for those…
Descriptors: Homework, Evaluative Thinking, Value Judgment, Play
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White, Peter; Syncox, David; Alters, Brian – Interactive Learning Environments, 2011
Using classroom response systems (clickers) to accumulate grade-points has become a controversial practice as response systems have become more widely used in the last decade. Although some instructors opt to use clickers on a non-grades basis, it has become quite common to reward students for (a) correct answers, (b) participating in clicker…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Cheating, Grades (Scholastic), Rewards
Schachter, Ron – District Administration, 2011
Last July, the Atlanta Public Schools became the poster district for teachers and principals behaving badly. State investigators found that, in 44 schools across the city, 178 teachers and administrators had systematically cheated on the state standardized tests taken by their students in 2009. The largest cheating scandal by far has cast a pall…
Descriptors: Public Schools, Cheating, Reputation, Standardized Tests
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Berschback, Rick – Journal of College Teaching & Learning, 2011
College professors often regard their time in the classroom fulfilling and rewarding; the chance to affect the academic and professional development of their students is most likely a key reason why they chose to be professional educators. Unfortunately, with college courses come college credits, which necessitate a course grade for each student,…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Cheating, Adjunct Faculty, Teaching Methods
Wasley, Paula – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2008
Many professors do not give much thought to what students take away from their syllabi. Researchers who have formally pondered the question suggest a number of areas for instructors to consider when drafting a document which is described as a contract drafted with "less attention paid to the language" than any other. In a comparison of syllabi…
Descriptors: Form Classes (Languages), Tests, Grading, Course Descriptions
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Edwards, Nelta M. – College Teaching, 2007
This article analyzes a social statistics class that engaged in self-grading. Students liked self-grading because they identified their own mistakes, it reinforced what they learned, and they received immediate feedback. Some students worried that others would cheat, but this assertion was not confirmed in the data and the possibility of cheating…
Descriptors: Statistics, Grades (Scholastic), Grading, Self Evaluation (Individuals)
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Maduro, Morris – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2006
The use of a photocopier to archive exams consumes photocopier resources and generates a large amount of waste. As an alternative, I have been using a consumer-grade digital camera to document exams in an upper-division biology course. The approach is inexpensive and offers a number of advantages over photocopies. (Contains 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Photography, Biology, Grading, Cheating
Dirks, Matthew – 1997
Some of the major research in the area of assessment, concentrating on distance learning, is reviewed, and a strategy that can be used as a guideline for assessment of distance learning, and particularly World Wide Web-based courses, is introduced. A review of assessment strategies confirms that a balance between knowledge acquisition and…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cheating, College Faculty, Distance Education
Payne, Stephen L., Ed.; Charnov, Bruce H., Ed. – 1987
Ethical dilemmas faced by many academicians in the course of their work activities and role demands are described in eight articles and 24 case illustrations. Article titles and authors are as follows: "The Academician as Good Citizen" (Bruce H. Charnov); "Fundamental Means to Ethical Teaching" (Gordon A. Walter, Mary Ann Von Glinow); "Concern for…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Cheating, College Faculty, College Instruction