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Exams

Notecards

Allow students to bring a page of equations to the exam.
  • Students perform their own review to compile the equation list.
  • Reduces student anxiety
  • Students think you are nice

Student-written questions

As a homework question, ask students to write an exam question.
  • Sometimes a student produces a clever, well-written question that you can actually use after the student graduates.
  • Students have little conception of how hard it is to write exam questions until this exercise. They suddenly appreciate your work.
  • For ideas on how to implement this, see The Hidden Curriculum: Faculty-Made Tests in College Science , S. Tobias, J. Raphael eds., Plenum Press: NY, 1997.

Formatting

  • At the bottom of each exam page, draw an answer box in which students must place their answers.
    • Don’t rely on students to box their own answers. Label the box “Put your answer in the box.”
    • This saves immense time in trying to figure out which number is supposed to be the answer amidst a page of incorrect work.
  • On the exam include a summary score sheet listing the points available on each question.
    • Now you do not have to draw one on each exam you grade.
    • It notifies students which questions are more valuable.
    • Place this on the exam so that you can fold back the face page of the exam and still see the summary chart (e.g. on the back of the 1st page, or on the 2nd page). Folding the first page back helps convince students that you grade fairly, without looking at student names. It also enhances student privacy: when exams are returned, only the students’ names - and not their grades - are visible for other students to see.

Regrades

  • Require written requests for regrades to be due within one week.
  • Set a regrade limit, at maximum 5% of the overall exam score.
    • Require students to dispute at least the number of points in the regrade limit in order for a regrade to be considered.
    • This is particularly useful in classes with a heavy pre-med enrollment. Large numbers of students will argue vociferously for an inconsequential change in their grade.

Final exams

Consider not returning your final exams to the class (although students should be allowed to view exams).
  • If your exam has not made it to a student file somewhere, you may be able to reuse some questions.
  • If you implement a new teaching method, you can gauge the performance of two groups of students on identical tests.

Homework

Students should collect graded homework in a place physically apart from your office.

Even if it is just down the hall, it will reduce interruptions.

Make your first homework assignment a non-graded self-test of the prerequisite material. make it due quickly.

Unprepared students who have not taken the pre-reqs will drop your course, instead of taking your time to teach them course material from another class. The students who are on track will benefit from the review.

Many colleagues and i maximize our ta support by instituting…

  1. Some (small) number of multiple choice questions on every exam.
  2. Partial grading of homework.
To see how this is done, and for references to materials on hints for writing good multiple choice questions, see our paper (Keller and Smith).

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Source:  OpenStax, 2008 nsf advance workshop: negotiating the ideal faculty position. OpenStax CNX. Feb 24, 2010 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10628/1.3
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