CitedEvidence
User Settings
Article

Implementing perception across a large HEI: getting it right

Bill Warburton,Ian Harwood-2004-01-01-ePrints Soton (University of Southampton)
1

TL;DRAbstract

Assessment is a sensitive issue, and converting traditional methods of assessment to Computer-Assisted Assessment (CAA) is acknowledged to be a risky activity (Harwood & Warburton 2004; Zakrzewski & Steven 2000). As students become more litigious (Baty 2004; QAA 1998) and competitive pressures increase Universities cannot afford mistakes when implementing new assessment strategies.<br/>The University of Southampton is developing a managed learning environment (MLE). It ran a pilot Perception CAA project across the institution in preparation for the launch of Perception as a full-scale University CAA service, in anticipation of its integration into the MLE. Many Perception tests were run during this project, but two different large simultaneous tests failed irretrievably. In one case the outcome was positive, whilst the other was less so.<br/>This paper reflects on the differences between these two failed tests and thereby presents a novel view of the issues

Chat with Paper

AI Agents for this Paper

Assessment is a sensitive issue, and converting traditional methods of assessment to Computer-Assisted Assessment (CAA) is acknowledged to be a risky activity (Harwood & Warburton 2004; Zakrzewski & Steven 2000). As students become more litigious (Baty 2004; QAA 1998) and competitive pressures increase Universities cannot afford mistakes when implementing new assessment strategies.<br/>The University of Southampton is developing a managed learning environment (MLE). It ran a pilot Perception CAA project across the institution in preparation for the launch of Perception as a full-scale University CAA service, in anticipation of its integration into the MLE. Many Perception tests were run during this project, but two different large simultaneous tests failed irretrievably. In one case the outcome was positive, whilst the other was less so.<br/>This paper reflects on the differences between these two failed tests and thereby presents a novel view of the issues

Keywords

Context (archaeology)PerceptionAnticipation (artificial intelligence)Scale (ratio)InstitutionPsychologyService (business)Higher education

Chat

Click to start Chat