Table of Contents

AY 300 - Fall 2012: Fifth Day Lesson Plan

Preface

Today's class will discuss writing effective test questions, designing worksheets, and begin board work exercises.

GOALS

Section/Group Work Sharing (15 min)

The person on call for this week will share their section experience. Some questions include:

During this (and after), open the floor up for general questions and sharing about how sections are going.

Exam Questions (40 min)

Activity

Part 1 (15 min)

Part 2 (25 min)

Main take-aways: 1. The stem of the question should be meaningful but not wordy. (e.g., More than just “The seasons… (a)(b)©(d)(e)” but less than a paragraph about the Earth and its seasons (and then five responses).)

2. Avoid double negatives. In general, write the stem of the question in the positive. Students read negative terms and forget to reverse the logic of the relations being tested.

3. Irrelevant difficult is unnecessary. What are you testing them on? If you want to probe their knowledge of subtle points, make sure it is warranted (e.g., “Is this subtlety necessary to understand a bigger theme of the course?”)?

4. All distractors (incorrect answers) should be plausible. I really liked Therese's suggestion of having someone not in the course read your responses (but not the stem). If they can pick out the correct answer (or obvious wrong answers), then you have work to do. That said…

5. All responses should have a similar tone and length.

6. Avoid “none of the above” and “all of the above”, especially when all possibilities are listed in parts (a)–(d)!

Other questions to critique, if time:

Some Notes

Union Rep (15 min)

Writing Worksheets (30 min)

So if group work is so great, how do you facilitate it? Well made worksheets are a good way. Here are some examples:

Each small group will be given a different worksheet. Discuss what makes the worksheet effective for stimulating group work, what could be improved upon, etc. We will share with the class. In the (perhaps near) future, we will return to worksheets and discuss ways of writing your own.

Some info for you:

Remind everyone that they're required to contribute their “best original worksheet” (or a significantly improved one) to the EBRB.

Worksheets should:
How to present worksheets

Worksheets are intended to get students collaborating in groups, which has been proven a great way to get them to learn the material in depth. How do we get students collaborating the way we want?

What makes a good worksheet?
What makes a bad worksheet?
Instructors present some of their own example worksheets used in their sections.
Worksheet tips:

Board work (10 min)