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Eva Neely; Andrea LaMarre; Liz McKibben; Katie Sharp; Shirley Simons – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2025
Creative assessments hold the potential to counter outcome-oriented and utilitarian approaches to teaching, characteristic of neoliberal academia. This paper explores the potentialities of digital stories as one form of creative assessment that may help rupture normative ways of teaching-learning and engaging with affective pedagogies. The authors…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Technology Uses in Education, Educational Technology, Electronic Learning
Jeremy G. Acree; Tiffany L. S. Tovey; Robert Petrulis – American Journal of Evaluation, 2025
In this reflective case, we examine the role and function of collaboration in use-oriented evaluation approaches. Reflecting on our experience evaluating a program that sought to integrate new technologies into K-12 teaching and pre-service teacher education, we found that the desire and pursuit of making evaluation useful can influence why, with…
Descriptors: Program Evaluation, Technology Integration, Intersectionality, Elementary Secondary Education
Evaluation of Teacher Professional Learning Workshops on the Use of Technology - A Systematic Review
Alireza Ahadi; Matt Bower; Jennifer Lai; Abhay Singh; Michael Garrett – Professional Development in Education, 2024
Teacher professional learning workshops have been frequently used to prepare in-service and pre-service teachers for effective use of technology in education. Evaluation of these workshops is crucial to identify the effectiveness of these programmes in terms of improving teaching skills, increasing knowledge, changing attitudes, and developing…
Descriptors: Professional Development, Communities of Practice, Inservice Teacher Education, Preservice Teacher Education
Björn Hammarfelt; Claes-Fredrik Helgesson; Gustaf Nelhans; Erik Joelsson – Research Evaluation, 2024
Disciplines display field-specific ways of valuing research contributions, and these different 'styles of valuation' influence how academic careers are assessed and formed. Yet, differences in how research is evaluated are also prevalent between different levels of assessment: collegial and organizational. Consequently, we employ a multifaceted…
Descriptors: Evaluation Methods, Guidelines, College Faculty, Humanities
Sang-June Park; Youjae Yi – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Previous research explicates ordinal and disordinal interactions through the concept of the "crossover point." This point is determined via simple regression models of a focal predictor at specific moderator values and signifies the intersection of these models. An interaction effect is labeled as disordinal (or ordinal) when the…
Descriptors: Interaction, Predictor Variables, Causal Models, Mathematical Models
Ian Greener – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
This paper argues for three aspects of tolerance with respect to QCA research: tolerance with respect to different approaches to QCA; producing QCA research with tolerance (work that is resistant to criticism); and for QCA researchers to be clear about the tolerance of the solutions they present -- especially in terms of calibration and truth…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Research Methodology, Comparative Analysis, Research Design
Robert H. Eaglen; Steven J. Durning; Holly S. Meyer; Christopher S. Candler – Quality in Higher Education, 2024
Higher education accreditation has spread internationally as a vehicle for quality assurance and improvement but is strongly influenced by accreditation practices in the United States. The organisational structure and processes of seven United States health professions accreditors were analysed to identify common characteristics that reflect…
Descriptors: Accreditation (Institutions), Quality Assurance, Evaluators, Evaluation Methods
Carpentras, Dino; Quayle, Michael – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2023
Agent-based models (ABMs) often rely on psychometric constructs such as 'opinions', 'stubbornness', 'happiness', etc. The measurement process for these constructs is quite different from the one used in physics as there is no standardized unit of measurement for opinion or happiness. Consequently, measurements are usually affected by 'psychometric…
Descriptors: Psychometrics, Error of Measurement, Models, Prediction
Bennett, Randy E. – Educational Measurement: Issues and Practice, 2022
This commentary focuses on one of the positive impacts of COVID-19, which was to tie societal inequity to testing in a manner that could motivate the reimagining of our field. That reimagining needs to account for our nation's dramatically changing demographics so that assessment generally, and standardized testing specifically, better fit the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Social Justice, Testing
Burkholder, Joel M.; Phillips, Kat – Journal of Information Literacy, 2022
What is bias? A review of the library literature reveals no attempts to define the concept. Nor does it reveal systematic attempts to develop interventions that teach the identification and evaluation of bias. Current pedagogical approaches (checklists and bias charts) tend to assume a self-evident definition that categorises bias as…
Descriptors: Bias, Information Literacy, Information Sources, Evaluation Methods
Chen, Xiaojun; Zhang, Ying; Wu, Wei; Luo, Yupeng; Shi, Yangming – International Journal of Technology in Teaching and Learning, 2022
This paper explores assessment approaches within the unique context of Extended Reality (XR) learning environments, which offer immersive and contextualized experiences. Focusing on STEM disciplines, the paper presents four distinctive XR-based assessment cases, exploring the discipline, context, purpose, and results of each. These insights aim to…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Evaluation Methods, Computer Simulation, Educational Environment
Reynolds, Joshua J. – Teaching of Psychology, 2022
Introduction: Assessing teaching effectiveness is relevant for improving one's teaching and for moving through the tenure process; however, the validity of assessment methods, such as Student Evaluations of Teaching (SET), have been heavily criticized. Statement of the Problem: Using a one-group pretest-posttest design and assessing learning over…
Descriptors: Teacher Effectiveness, Pretests Posttests, Evaluation Methods, Outcomes of Education
Mio, Matthew J.; Benvenuto, Mark A. – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
The idea of a practical examination in a subject is an old and established one in many fields, within chemistry, in widely differing areas of academics, and in many on-the-job training scenarios. In a dedicated course on chemical safety, we have found that "the unsafe lab practical" makes for a thought-provoking and yet fun final…
Descriptors: Laboratory Safety, Chemistry, Student Evaluation, Evaluation Methods
Zachary K. Collier; Minji Kong; Olushola Soyoye; Kamal Chawla; Ann M. Aviles; Yasser Payne – Journal of Educational and Behavioral Statistics, 2024
Asymmetric Likert-type items in research studies can present several challenges in data analysis, particularly concerning missing data. These items are often characterized by a skewed scaling, where either there is no neutral response option or an unequal number of possible positive and negative responses. The use of conventional techniques, such…
Descriptors: Likert Scales, Test Items, Item Analysis, Evaluation Methods
David Boud; Margaret Bearman – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2024
There is a general tension between the individualised nature of current assessment practices in higher education and a collaborative approach to learning. This results in many dilemmas for educators as they try to balance academic integrity concerns and student preferences with social or collaborative assessment practices, including peer…
Descriptors: Socialization, Cooperative Learning, Higher Education, Peer Evaluation