Home
Categories
EXPLORE
True Crime
Comedy
Society & Culture
Business
News
Sports
TV & Film
About Us
Contact Us
Copyright
© 2024 PodJoint
00:00 / 00:00
Sign in

or

Don't have an account?
Sign up
Forgot password
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts6/v4/ee/2d/51/ee2d51b4-d496-f925-6153-2c14724889b6/mza_5473357633787326979.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching
Sean Delaney
300 episodes
2 months ago
An Irish perspective on news and stories from the world of education
Show more...
How To
Education
RSS
All content for Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching is the property of Sean Delaney and is served directly from their servers with no modification, redirects, or rehosting. The podcast is not affiliated with or endorsed by Podjoint in any way.
An Irish perspective on news and stories from the world of education
Show more...
How To
Education
https://is1-ssl.mzstatic.com/image/thumb/Podcasts6/v4/ee/2d/51/ee2d51b4-d496-f925-6153-2c14724889b6/mza_5473357633787326979.jpg/600x600bb.jpg
Inside Education 417, Assessment, Feedback & Academic Integrity (25-4-21)
Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching
53 minutes 11 seconds
4 years ago
Inside Education 417, Assessment, Feedback & Academic Integrity (25-4-21)
Presented and produced by Seán Delaney. This week my guest on the podcast is expert on assessment, feedback and academic integrity, Professor Phillip Dawson from Deakin University. Among the topics we discuss on the podcast are the following: How academic integrity is learned throughout our lives – and how even Peppa Pig has been known to flout academic integrity. What a secondary school teacher needs to know about academic integrity – values and technical skills Academic integrity travels with us: Medical students who have more academic integrity problems have more professional integrity problems as doctors Acknowledging student work that is original Scalable feedback practices at feedbackforlearning.org. Text matching software (e.g. Turn-it-in) can help provide feedback at scale. Recognising patterns in errors legitimately made by students on a module Estimated instances of cheating among university students, by “outsourcing” their work, range from 6% to 16% When the student signals that an assignment is tough, the temptation to cheat appears, literally. Intellectual streaking and intellectual candour (Margaret Bearman and Elizabeth Molloy. The importance of faculty sharing their own experiences of receiving feedback with students. Contract cheating and blackmail. Lesley Sefcik and Jon Yorke. University faculty are more likely to spot contract cheating when they are looking out for it. Initial suspicion versus investigation of contract cheating Resources to combat contract cheating from the Australian Tertiary Education Quality and Standards Agency. Cheating and Assessment Project The difference between referencing blunders and contract cheating Where students are more/less likely to cheat: types of work, disciplines The work of Tracey Bretag and colleagues Designing assessments to minimise the likelihood of contract cheating Authentic assessments Benefits of few, enforceable authentic restrictions Review of authentic assessments by Villarroel et al (2020) Article on authentic assessment and authentic feedback by Dawson, Carless and Lee (2021). Assessment rubrics Article by Dawson Article 1 and Article 2 on assessment by James Popham: and Analytical, holistic and co-constructed rubrics Alfie Kohn podcast Winstone and Bowd (2020): the need to disentangle assessment and feedback in higher education Pitt & Norton (2017) Student Responses to feedback Sustainable assessment and evaluative judgment One person who inspires Phillip is his boss, David Boud: https://www.deakin.edu.au/about-deakin/people/david-boud. One of David Boud’s articles on sustainable assessment.
Inside Education - a podcast for educators interested in teaching
An Irish perspective on news and stories from the world of education