Rubrics, Assessment and eProctoring in Education
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Rubrics, Assessment and eProctoring in Education
Using and creating meaningful assessment strategies in education
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Rescooped by Peter Mellow from Digital Learning - beyond eLearning and Blended Learning
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Cambridge University could allow laptops and iPads for exams 

Cambridge University could allow laptops and iPads for exams  | Rubrics, Assessment and eProctoring in Education | Scoop.it
Academics say that the move, which would bring an end to more than 800 years of tradition, has come about because students rely too heavily on laptops in lectures, and are losing the ability to write by hand.

Cambridge University has now launched a consultation on the topic as part of its "digital education strategy", having already piloted an exam typing scheme in the History and Classics faculties earlier this year.

In an online survey, students are asked whether they would like the option to type exams, and whether this would have a “significant positive impact” on their “well-being”.  

Via Kim Flintoff
Kim Flintoff's curator insight, November 19, 2017 4:29 PM
About time...  the reliance on disused and flailing social practices - like handwriting - are discriminatory and retrograde.  
Rescooped by Kim Flintoff from Educational Technology in Higher Education
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Grading with Voice on an iPad

Grading with Voice on an iPad | Rubrics, Assessment and eProctoring in Education | Scoop.it

One of the frustrating things I found in teaching online last semester was the lack of direct contact with students. The class felt impersonal, despite my efforts to give it life.

I found that especially frustrating when I graded assignments. The feedback seemed cold and distant, even as I as I tried to point out strong areas of writing and multimedia projects.


Via Mark Smithers
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Rescooped by Peter Mellow from Educational iPad User Group
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New iPad Feature Prevents Students From Cheating On Tests | Edudemic

New iPad Feature Prevents Students From Cheating On Tests | Edudemic | Rubrics, Assessment and eProctoring in Education | Scoop.it

Apple has added in some controls to Guided Access that lets teachers turn off the ability to use Safari to look up answers while taking a test. In fact, you can disable and enable all sorts of custom controls. You can use ‘Single App Mode’ where a student can ONLY use the app that’s delivering the test.

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Rescooped by Peter Mellow from Educational iPad User Group
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ForAllRubrics - Super Powered Rubrics

ForAllRubrics - Super Powered Rubrics | Rubrics, Assessment and eProctoring in Education | Scoop.it

Free For Teachers: Classroom AssessmentEasily create your own rubricsComplete rubrics on iPads, tablets or phonesCollect data offline with no internet accessCompute scores automaticallyPrint rubrics or save as PDF or spreadsheet


Via Kim Flintoff
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Grading with Voice on an iPad - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education

Grading with Voice on an iPad - ProfHacker - The Chronicle of Higher Education | Rubrics, Assessment and eProctoring in Education | Scoop.it

I found that especially frustrating when I graded assignments. The feedback seemed cold and distant, even as I as I tried to point out strong areas of writing and multimedia projects.

I overcame this in part by using my iPad to add audio comments to grading. This was a revelation to me. Using an app called iAnnotate, I could write comments on PDFs but also add voice comments, allowing me to make grading more personal but also add details that I otherwise wouldn’t have included.

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