I gave an absent team member the GRAT score the first absence only, expecting that the peer evaluation scores would reflect a lowering of the team points for an absent member if the team was not notified with a reason that they accepted. So, for that unit, the consequences were in the team's control. For any additional absences (which didn't happen much), I would count the student's IRAT score as their GRAT score. And, I expected that peer evaluation would also continue affecting the student's team score as well. I also liked a method I learned from a colleague and adopted. I added a couple extra questions to all make-up tests (RAT and end of unit) that added no points to their score if correct but subtracted points from student scores if missed (regardless of reason missed.) By explaining these "extra questions for make-ups" method at the beginning of the course, it seemed to be accepted by students as fair and gave them a good reason not to miss unless they had to. Kathy Ross Kathy Ross, Ph.D. Instructional Technologist Center for Teaching, Learning, and Assessment Indiana University Kokomo 2300 South Washington PO Box 9003 Kokomo, IN 46904-9003 765-455-9392 [log in to unmask] Message----- From: Team Learning Discussion List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Christine Kuramoto Sent: Thursday, October 16, 2008 5:02 AM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: TBL RAT absenteeism Hello All, Today was our first real RAP and a few students were absent. Do you give the absent students the team RAT point, or just a zero? Thanks in advance! Christine -- ******* Christine Kuramoto, Assistant Professor: Medical English Kyushu University, Department of Medical Education Faculty of Medical Sciences 3-1-1 Maidashi, Higashi-ku, Fukuoka, 812-8582 Japan Phone: (+81)92-642-6186 Fax: (+81)92-642-6188 E-mail: [log in to unmask]