Assessment practices (graded or ungraded) should be planned out intentionally to foster students’ learning. In particular, such planning should be done not only at the course level but also at programme level.
Why do we need to plan assessments at the programme level?
Scholars and practitioners have argued that assessment practices should be planned at the programme level, rather than merely at the course level. While instructors design assessments for individual courses, students typically juggle assessments across multiple courses. The lack of proper and holistic assessment planning beyond course level can cause various issues (e.g., bunching of assessment deadlines, high cognitive load, etc.), which in turn may foster students’ adoption of surface learning (Tomas & Jessop, 2019).
How can we plan assessments at the programme level?
We can use the following questions to evaluate the adequacy of assessment pattern and make necessary mitigations:
- Are assessments aligned well with all programme outcomes (POs)?
It is useful to tabulate POs and assessments for each course in one table or spreadsheet. This allows us to evaluate the coverage of POs in assessments and identify assessments that are redundant.
- Are there bunched assessment deadlines for students?
Submission deadline of each assessment can be mapped out at the programme level. This allows us to identify and mitigate possible pressure points with bunched assessment deadlines.
Use the Psychology programme at SUSS as an example. - The programme provides a recommended study plan to both full-time and part-time students. For example, below is the recommended study plan for Year 1 students.
- Head of Programme (HoP) then maps out assessment deadlines and lecture sessions across courses for each semester. For example, the figure below is the assessment mapping for July semester. While the first column indicates the academic week, each subsequent column shows the schedule of each lecture session (cell in orange) and assessment deadline for a specified course.
- HoP takes various measures to mitigate bunched deadlines (particularly for assessments with higher demands, such as TMA, GBA, ECA, etc.). The mitigation strategies include coordinating assessment deadlines across courses and among instructors, better utilising the 12-week curriculum time, eliminating unhelpful assessments, etc.
- Before course registration, the information of assessment deadlines and course schedules at the programme level is released to students, so that students can plan their studies accordingly (particularly if students wish to take courses outside the recommended study plan).
- The information of assessment deadlines and course schedules is also released to faculty and associate faculty, to assist with better planning (e.g., particularly for management of marking load and timeline).
- Is feedback provided to students in time?
We should also incorporate feedback timeline into the aforementioned assessment mapping, so that students can use the feedback on assessment to inform their learning and improve their performance on the subsequent assessments.
Further Reading
“Thinking programmatically about your assessment and feedback practices: The programme spring-clean” guide by Heriot-Watt University.
Reference
Tomas, C., & Jessop, T. (2019). Struggling and juggling: A comparison of student assessment loads across research and teaching-intensive universities. Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 44(1), 1-10. https://doi.org/10.1080/02602938.2018.1463355