Include Knowledge Checks and Formative Assessments

Include Knowledge Checks and Formative Assessments

When you’re teaching in person, you may gauge student understanding of topics based on students’ facial expressions during lectures, whether or not they raise their hands and ask questions during discussions, and other non-verbal reactions to course material. When teaching remotely, you may not have the opportunity to pause mid-lecture and ask quick questions to ensure that students are understanding the content as you go, so it is imperative that you incorporate knowledge checks and other formative assessments to monitor and respond to student learning. 

A formative assessment is a planned and ongoing process for collecting evidence of students’ learning. Students use formative assessments to check their own understanding and implement changes to their approach to learning based on instructor feedback. Instructors use formative assessments to inform future changes to their teaching based on students’ evolving performance and learning needs (Popham, 2008).

In the Core Template

There is a sample quiz established in the Core Template called Week 1 Quiz. You can create a “check for understanding” type quiz where students address one or two key topics/questions that are covered in the weekly readings or lectures to ensure that they’ve achieved the weekly learning outcomes. Quizzes don’t have to be graded; the Quiz tool also creates practice quizzes and graded and ungraded surveys. Discussions or Assignments are also tools you can use to administer formative assessments. The Collaborations tool can also be used to assess group understanding serving as a low-stakes assessment in your remote or online class. Providing feedback comments (written or recorded audio/video) in the Speedgrader will also enable students to check their understanding as they work through your course.

Examples of Formative Assessments

The Center for Teaching and Learning(link is external) adapted the following list of formative assessments from Classroom Assessment Techniques: A Handbook for College Teachers, by Thomas A. Angelo and K. Patricia Cross (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass, 1993 [Second Edition]) and the UC Davis Center for Excellence in Teaching and Learning, AITC Workshops 2014. Though these formative assessments are presented in the context of remote and online instruction, they are useful for courses in any format.

Resources

Remote Instruction Guide

Canvas Blog

GSI Teaching & Resource Center

Reference

Popham, W. J. (2008). Transformative Assessment. Alexandria. VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.