Dear Suzie, I've talked with a number of faculty who have faced similar situations and all of them have had good success by: 1) Using the grade-weight setting exercise and, 2) Explicitly stating that to get a pass students have to get a pass in ALL THREE GRADE COMPONENTS (i.e., individual performance, team performance and a peer evaluation). In most cases, the faculty members did not know until after submitting the grades which enrollment option students were in AND COULDN'T TELL BASED ON THEIR PERFORMANCE. Larry ----- Larry K. Michaelsen Professor of Management University of Central Missouri Dockery 400G Warrensburg, MO 64093 [log in to unmask] 660/429-9873 voice <---NEW ATT cell phone 660/543-8465 fax >>> Suzie Lavallee <[log in to unmask]> 06/04/10 1:51 PM >>> Hello I teach an 3rd year undergraduate course in conservation which has an enrollment of about 60 people (estimated 100+ in 2011), approximately half of whom take the course as a required component of their degree, the other half who take it as an elective. Next year, our institution is enacting a credit/d/fail status for courses that are taken as electives and my course will have the status applied to it. More than half of the students in my course will be able to take it for credit/d/fail status instead of a letter grade, the others will not have this option. Although I would like to revamp the course to use team-based learning next year, I am wary of the influence that the credit/d/fail status may have on group work and individual motivation. I would be grateful to hear from anyone who has some experience and/or has conducted research on this type of situation. Cheers, Suzie Lavallee Suzie Lavallee, PhD Lecturer, Natural Resources Conservation Program Dept. of Forest Sciences, University of British Columbia #3035-2424 Main Mall, Vancouver BC, V6T 1Z4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ <mailto:[log in to unmask]> [log in to unmask] Phone: (604) 822-4987 Fax: (604) 822-9102 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Check out the course website at: <http://courses.forestry.ubc.ca/cons451> http://courses.forestry.ubc.ca/cons451