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Cell Biology for Life
Philosophy
Part 3 of 4
Introduction

Document available in PDF format: Cell Biology for Life - PhilosophyPDF Document.

Resource Four: Class Assessment of Group Work Presentation
Resource four is a worksheet for the class to score and rank all group presentations other than their own. Instructors can then review the completed sheets, remove the names from the sheets and give them to the individual groups so that they may review multiple critiques of their presentations. Alternatively, the instructor can summarize the most frequent positive and negative responses and give these to the individual groups. In my experience, students are harsh critics. By pointing out shortcomings in the work of others they learn how to improve their own future work

Resource Five: Peer Assessment of Writing
Resource Five is a peer assessment of student writing, or a peer review worksheet. The peer critique or assessment saves the instructor a great deal of work because the first draft of the written work will have been critiqued by at least one other member of the class before being given to the instructor. Students tend to take their work more seriously if they know that their peers will view it. I have found peer critiques to be extremely effective, honest and supportive, because the students are part of a collective struggle and have built a community around the experience. Depending on the course, you may choose to grade the peer critiques so that students view this assignment as contributing to their own self-awareness of the writing process.

Resource Six: Self Assessment of Writing
Resource six is a self-reflective guide to writing. By having students describe in their own words their intent, approach, and process for a written piece of work, they gain insight to their own methodology. Instructors also benefit from the student self reflection, since patterns or themes of struggle may surface when viewing all student responses. It is important to address these collective frustrations and offer more direction if needed. Even if these these questions are not addressed during class, however, students might still benefit greatly from considering this resource on their own.

Resource Seven: Worksheet for Reading Primary Literature
Resource seven is a worksheet designed to guide students through a reading of primary literature. If this worksheet is used repeatedly in a course, students will become aware of behaviors that help them understand the material (analysis of figures and tables, defining new terms, summation of important points, outlining the article) and behaviors that inhibit their understanding of material (skipping unknown terms, overlooking figures and tables, skimming paragraphs, concentrating on details without seeing the overall picture). Again, students might find this resource helpful, even it it is not discussed during class.

Resource Eight: A Collection of Grading Rubrics
Working with nontraditional curricula can be particularly challenging when it comes to evaluation of student work. Both students and instructors benefit when objective standards of evaluation are set out clearly from the beginning of an activity. I include in this resource a collection of grading rubrics that serve as models of evaluation standards appropriate for some of the nontraditional learning activities employed in CBL. These rubrics are based on personal and collective educational experience. In particular, these strategies of evaluation have been developed extensively by the College Level One Team of the National Institute for Science Education (www.flaguide.org) and by Elaine Seymour in her related project of developing Student Assessments of Learning Gains (http://www.wcer.wisc.edu/salgains/instructor/default.asp).

Parting Thought

The activities and resources presented in each module are a starting point and instructors should tailor the modules to suit their specific goals, learning styles, and teaching styles. Since class time and size vary and present constraints upon teaching activities, alternative suggestions for implementation are also included in the Teaching Notes to each activity.

By incorporating Cell Biology for Life with traditional methods of teaching, students will remain curious and develop the skills necessary to become life long learners of biology and become more contributive members of society.


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