There was a great webinar in the iamse series this morning on peer eval in tbl

Ruth Levine and Paul Koles talked about a variety of approaches and strategies

One of the many great points was about the open end/qualitative comments...they use "I appreciate you do this" and "request that you do this". 

I really like this idea...one thing to keep doing and one thing to work on
 
They share the comments back to the students...and Paul kolas adds marking the comments other students give

I.e. Your peer eval score comes from your peers and the quality of the feedback you have given


Jim Sibley

Sorry for brief message -sent from my iPad

On 2010-10-07, at 4:39 PM, "Sonia Townsend" <[log in to unmask]> wrote:

Hi Laura and everyone else

 

I use a numerical system after every team activity however I am thinking of shifting to alternating numerical with open ended comments so students can learn from each other. This is in response to recent concerns that a student was consistently being marked down by another student in their team for being of a different ethnicity/ESOL student. Has anyone else had to deal with racism in their teams? If so, how did you resolve it??

 

Thanks in advance

Sonia

 

Sonia Townsend | CertHSc Teaching and Learning Coordinator | Senior Tutor

Te Kupenga Hauora Māori | Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences | University of Auckland

Physical Address  Level 4, School of Population Health | Tamaki Campus | 261 Morrin Rd | Glen Innes

Postal Address  Private Bag 92019 | Auckland Mail Centre | Auckland 1142 | New Zealand

Tel 64 9 373 7599 xtn 89710| Fax 64 9 303 5947 | Mob 64 21 767 047 | Email [log in to unmask]

From: Team-Based Learning [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Laura Madson
Sent: Friday, 8 October 2010 7:57 a.m.
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: peer evaluation practices

 

Hello everyone -
I’m curious about the peer evaluation procedures you use. Would you take a few moments to respond to the following “straw poll?” In addition, please feel free to send any thoughts or comments about peer evaluations.

  1. How many times do you collect peer evaluations during a term (e.g., once, twice, after each team activity)?
  2. Do you use a numerical peer evaluations (e.g., assigning points or answering survey items on a 1-to-7 scale), open-ended comments, both, or something else?
  3. Do you share peer evaluations with students?


In the spirit of sharing, I tell you my answers to the above questions. I teach undergraduates in large-enrollment sections (N=140) of Introduction to Psychology. In the past, I’ve collected peer evaluations at the end of the term using survey items rated on a 1-to-7 scale and I haven’t shared peer evaluations with students (unless they asked about their final grade). This semester, I’m experimenting with collecting open-ended comments after each team activity and sharing those formative comments with students. Its too early in the semester to determine the effect of the new peer evaluation procedure but the change got me wondering about the variety of peer evaluation procedures used by other TBL folks.

Many thanks for your thoughts and time!
lm
Laura Madson, Associate Professor and Graduate Director
Department of Psychology
Box 30001/MSC 3452
Las Cruces, NM 88003
(575) 646-6207
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