Explore our site for resources and guidance on conducting exams and alternative assessments.
These strategies, combined with the thorough curriculum design process, can be used
to help measure the student learning experience. While designing your online course,
consider the following recommendations:
The first step is to identify your student learning objectives (SLOs), and ensure
they align with your course activities and assessments. Click here to learn more about creating SLOs.
This encourages students to keep up on their classwork, and it reduces the incentive
to cheat because the value of each quiz is lower than one comprehensive test. It
also takes advantage of test-enhaced learning, the ideathat the process of remembering concepts or facts—retrieving them from memory—increases
long-term retention of those concepts or facts. When taking this approach, consider
the following:
Making quizzes low stakes - no one quiz should be a significant percentage of the
final grade
Dropping the lowest quiz grade
Allowing multiple attempts - and thus making the quizzes more of a formative assessment
References:
Brown, P. C., Roediger III, H. L., & McDaniel, M. A. (2014). Make it stick: The science
of successful learning. Harvard University Press.
Khanna, M. (2015). Ungraded Pop Quizzes: Test-Enhance Learning Without All the Anxiety.
Teaching of Psychology. 42(2): pp. 174- 178. Kibble, J. (2011). Voluntary Participation
in Online Formative Quizzes is a Sensitive Predictor of Student Success. Advances
in Physiology Education. 35(1): pp. 95-96.
Final Exams in Remote Courses, Emory University, 2020, cfde.emory.edu/documents/FinalExamsinRemoteCourses.pdf.
Tests are not the only option. If students are evaluated with various different methods,
you have the best way of ensuring that there is real learning taking place. Take a look at some alternative assessment ideas in the section below.
Require references no more than 5 years old, require specific references, require
annotated bibliographies and/or prospectuses.
Mix Objective and Subjective Questions:Subjective questions may demand a deeper understanding of the subject being tested,
are difficult to cheat on, and so can offset the impact of cheating on objective questions.
Use Question Pools:Rather than using a fixed number of items that remain unchanged for each administration
of the test, consider creating a question pool. Questions can be grouped into sections
(using the Question Library on Brightspace) by any number of criteria, including topic,
subject matter, question type or difficulty of question. You can then use question
pools to randomly select a set number of questions from a section(s) each time the
test or quiz is administered.
Randomize Questions : Question pools allow you to randomize which questions appear on a test/quiz. There
are also options that allow you to shuffle the order in which questions appear, and
to randomize the order of answer choices for each question (donotrandomize choices for questions that includeall or none of the aboveoptions). This strategy can address the issue of students who take a test at the same
time in order to share answers.
Set a Timer:Students who are adequately prepared for a test may be less likely to rely on open
book/notes compared with students unprepared for testing, particularly if their time
is limited. You can limit the time for a quiz/test under the restrictions tab on Brightspace.
Display Questions One At A Time:This will limit the ease for students to take a screen capture of the displayed questions
and share them with other students. You can also elect to prevent students from backtracking
to a previous question.
Be Explicit in the Directions:For each quiz or test, remind students that no phones or other devices should be within
their reach (e.g., on the desk, in a pocket, etc.) when they are working. Frequent
reminders convey to students you take cheating seriously, without saying the words
themselves.
Tools to prevent cheating on exams
Respondus LockDown Browser - Require students to use the Respondus LockDown Browser with online quizzes and tests.
This is a custom browser that prevents internet searches, accessing notes or other
applications on the computer, or copying the exam questions themselves, among other
things. Learn how to add Respondus to a Quiz in Brightspace!
Respondus Monitor - Uses the student's webcam to prevent cheating during non-proctored exams. PLEASE
NOTE: Students will need access to a webcam for this tool.
Direct your students to verify they have all the necessary working components to useRespondusby taking a sample test.
Tools to prevent plagiarism
Turnitin - Enbale Turnitin on Brightspace. You will be able to view the Turnitin Similarity Report
for all student assignment submissions, which checks a student's work against their
databases and brings content matches to your attention. Learn more about Turnitin.
Properly cited direct quotes could show up as a match, but would not be considered
plagiarism. Be sure to review the reports generated by SafeAssign and Turnitin.
Develop unique or narrow assignment topics -These are more difficult to plagiarize.
Articulate what kinds of collaboration are permissible - Collusion may occur because students are not aware that working with a peer is
not allowed for a given assignment. Be explicit about your policies and expectations
on your syllabus and in directions for each assignment.
Provide opportunities for peer review and comments -Students that use content that is not their own are usually unable to effectively
answer questions about their plagiarized content.
Academic Integrity Policy integration -Create a quiz or question - Have students answer question(s) agreeing to the policy
or comprehension of policy components. Reminding students of their responsibility
can be a powerful method to deter cheating. Be sure to include the academic integrity
policy in the course information page on Brightspace, on the syllabus, and on each
test. Include a detailed description of plagiarism and the plagiarism policy. Consider
making a new announcement reiterating SBU’s policy.
Alternative Assessments
In addition to quizzes and exams with objective questions, consider adding alternative
assessments such as the ones below:
Graded Weekly Online Discussions What to ask:
Questions that require original thought, synthesizing of ideas, demonstrate comprehension
of a concept
Use prompts that do not have a single “correct” answer. Be sure there is no direct
answer in their text book or video lectures
Mix it up—ask for text or video answers (video could be a webcam answer, or it could
be recording something outside, a task they need to complete, a demo, etc.
Have them do a web search and post sites, images or videos to support their answer
Assign students to be discussion board leaders where they pose questions and respond
to other students
Utilize your TAs to help manage online discussions and provide feedback to students
The more fun and engaging it is, the more students will be excited to participate,
and therefore learn!
How to Grade:
Establish clear guidelines about quality and quantity
A grading rubric is a great tool that helps you quickly and fairly evaluate the post
each week, and it communicates to the students what you are looking for Sample Discussion Board Rubric.
This will allow you to monitor their progress and give frequent feedback. Long-term
retention is strengthened when students make mistakes and then correct them. This
type of assignment gives students plenty of room to try out new approaches and demonstrate
growth.
Ideas:
Ask for weekly summaries of big ideas
Give them options on how they can respond - text, audio, video, on-going blog or website
Assign a few well-designed problems to work out and ask students to include their
thought process (quality over quantity – this is good for you AND good for them!)
If it needs to be worked out on paper, they can take a picture and submit that to
an Assignment link or Discussion Board with an explanation
Mix it up: have them collaborate with partners or in small groups
Assignments in Brightspace can connect to Turnitin; softwares that check student work for published matches.
Have your students focus on real-world application of the information from their discipline.
Video presentations using VoiceThread: students can upload a PowerPoint and add video/audio comments to narrate them