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Innovative Student Assessment in EBL

The aim of this project is to make students full partners in the teaching and assessment of an EBL engineering mathematics course. The objective is that students will work in small groups using EBL to specialize on a particular part of the course syllabus. They will then teach their specialist part to their peers and formulate a suitable assessment question by which their peers' learning will be gauged. The desired outcome is to empower students' learning through having them experience the entire 'life cycle' of a taught course module, from preparation, through delivery to final assessment.
Project Team: Paul Grassia, Grant Campbell  Faculty: Engineering and Physical Sciences
Funding year: 2005
Keywords: assessment, chemical engineering, engineering, mathematics, groups, peer, syllabus, question writing, teamwork
Case Study as PDF Case Study (PDF, 151.3Kb)

Encouraging engineers to read: A book-based final year assessment

It is proposed to initiate a student-driven learning activity based around the directed reading of a book relevant to the broader context of chemical engineering. Students would then undertake formal assessment of the material covered in their book. The learning process would be managed via structured group activities including formal discussion groups. Benefits would include: (i) first view books as accessible and to have the inclination and interpretative tools to engage with them as a basis for lifelong learning; (ii) the opportunity for individual students to direct their learning towards areas of specific personal interest, through selection from a diverse pool of relevant books; (iii) a redirection of the teaching burden such that staff too are encouraged and enabled to make time for reading, with this otherwise luxury having the legitimate and tangible outcome of being directly connected to teaching.
Project Team: Dr Grant Campbell and Dr Paul Grassia  Faculty: Engineering and Physical Sciences
Funding year: 2008
Keywords: reading, discussion groups, chemical engineering, lifelong learning, personalized learning