English 1006G
Fall Term 2013-14
 

Assess your own learning reflection

Since for many people my assessment of the convincingness of the midyear learning reflection determined the midterm mark, it may be worth explaining again how I do that assessment. All the reflections are available on the Moodle site, and you can easily read a range of them to see some of the context. If your mark disappointed you, it may help to read my explanation, below, of the process I go through to make my assessment. I begin by assuming that every reflection is a potential A, and look for evidence to support that. In this case, I rarely found it.

You need to be aware, as you go through the process, that in this course "failing" (doing worse than you hoped) is not a final verdict; it's an opportunity to learn. The midterm mark is an indication of what you've learned -- and been able to document -- so far; it's not half (or some other percentage) of a final mark. If you missed completing lots of tasks in the first term, those consequences remain -- but by engaging in the second term's work it's quite possible to have enough learning to report in April to write a learning reflection that will earn a mark you're happy with.

So, slightly streamlined, here's how to read your own learning reflection and compare it with others.

First, I go through and strike out passages which are not relevant to the learning identified in the general statement about the aims of the course in the course introduction. Specifically:

Then I look at what's left. What I particularly look for is passages where: If I find such passages, I highlight them. I'm also looking for evidence of new understanding -- it might be of things like Finally, I consider what the document lets me infer about the writer's learning with respect to the larger goals of the course. Of course it isn't possible that someone who has been involved in the course and engaged with the process could convey everything she learned, so I look for evidence of the ability to relate general kinds of learning to concrete events -- readings of particular documents or texts or Forum postings, discussions with others, individual experiences with research on line or in the library. Just as I would have done with a final exam, back when I used to give them, I look for a range of different kinds of learning. For example, if nearly everything in the reflection has to do with one new idea, that's not as impressive in terms of overall learning as a range of different kinds of learning.

Finally, I reread the printouts looking for any possible excuse to raise a mark. I look, this time, for indications that the writer could have produced evidence of learning, though she didn't in fact do it. I consider that I probably didn't make myself clear enough about how the reflection should at least take into account my suggestions about constructing a synthesis. I raise some of the marks. At this point I reread the reflections of the people who have been mentioned more than a couple of times by others as having contributed to their learning (this term, there were extremely few such references); if there is some doubt about a final evaluation of a reflection, I give that person the higher possibility.

All this allows me to make the following range of judgments:

In the case of this course, evidence of learning that gets to a level of B shows an understanding of a wide range of ideas -- about how reading works, about awareness of the relations between readers and writers, about one's own writing, about interpretation of texts, about narrators and authors, about how texts convey meanings indirectly by inviting the reader to make judgements, etc. Evidence that gets to the A level does that by exhibiting the ability to make connections across areas -- for example, to draw learning out of comparison of two very different texts or experiences, or to relate specific concrete experiences to more general learning.


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