将学习科学应用于课堂教学:将学习与测试相结合的关键重要性

Q2 Social Sciences Journal of Food Science Education Pub Date : 2018-04-16 DOI:10.1111/1541-4329.12141
Julie A. Schell, Jennifer R. Porter
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引用次数: 6

摘要

评估对教师和学生来说都是一个长期的挑战。要想在考试中脱颖而出,学生必须参与一系列他们很少练习的复杂认知任务。为了有效地衡量学生的学习,教师必须设计针对特定知识和技能的总结性评估。不幸的是,尽管对主题有深入的了解和理解,但对于教师和学生来说,评估设计和考试往往会出错。令人好奇的是,尽管评估是各级教育最主要的特征之一,但学习者及其教授很少接受基于研究的策略的直接指导或培训,这些策略已被证明可以从根本上改善课堂测试。缺乏基于研究的考试和设计策略的后果是学生学习和考试之间的错位,这对我们课堂上教育过程的完整性产生了影响。本文的目的是解决终结性测试和学习之间的错位问题,并为更好的教学、学习和测试提供建议。虽然我们只讨论课堂总结性评估,但我们建议的策略适用于各种测试环境,包括高风险的标准化测试。在第一部分中,我们分析了测试和学习是如何工作的,并提供了检索增强学习理论,作为弥合学习和测试之间错位差距的桥梁。在第二部分中,我们提出了四个在课堂教学中引入检索增强学习的实用建议。当学生的学习和测试相一致时,我们得出了对实践的启示。有效的考试需要有效的学习、内容知识或程序技能的编码,以及在长期记忆中的必要存储(Karpicke,2016)。它还涉及在测试环境中成功检索和应用这些知识和技能。教师构建测试作为评估学生内容知识、理解和程序技能的一种手段。然而,测试也涉及一系列认知任务(见表1),这些任务必须在没有故障的情况下进行,学生才能在测试中取得成功。其中许多任务与学生主题知识或专业知识的深度无关。例如,学生工作记忆中可用的空间量与他们长期记忆中内容知识的理解量和深度是完全不同的。不幸的是,大多数学生在自主学习或学习期间没有足够频繁地练习测试中涉及的关键认知任务(Karpicke等人,2009)。相反,学生们在课堂外的大部分时间都在排练(Bransford等人,2000年)。与此同时,尽管主动学习在高等教育中越来越受欢迎,但课堂教学仍然主要以通过听讲座和记笔记进行被动学习为特色。阅读、复习、听力和记笔记是鼓励低阶认知技能的认知任务,如保留和理解知识。这些任务虽然级别较低,但对于初始学习所需的成功编码至关重要。然而,测试很少评估学生的听力、重读、强调或记笔记的能力。当学生将大部分学习集中在排练上,而不是在测试期间要求他们参与的一系列认知任务时,学习和测试结果之间的不一致,使评估教育过程的完整性面临风险。将检索强化学习理论融入课堂实践对学生的学习和教学具有重要意义。帮助弥合测试和学习之间差距的方法示例包括:1)向学生提供关于课堂期间频繁学习方法之间不一致的直接指导,包括对检索及其在教学大纲中的重要性的描述,以及2)采用基于研究的策略,帮助学生在课内外练习测试中的认知任务。将检索增强学习理论作为教学技巧的基本组成部分,提供了一种强有力的方法来协调测试和学习,并回答一个长期存在的问题,即我如何真正衡量我的学生是否真的在学习?
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Applying the Science of Learning to Classroom Teaching: The Critical Importance of Aligning Learning with Testing

Assessment presents a perennial challenge for both faculty and their students. To excel on a test, students must engage in a series of complex cognitive tasks they rarely practice. To effectively measure student learning, faculty must design summative assessments to target specific knowledge and skill. Unfortunately, despite knowing and understanding the subject matter at a deep level, assessment design and test taking can go often awry for instructors and their students. It is curious that while assessment is one of the most dominant features of education at all levels, learners and their professors seldom receive direct instruction or training on research-based strategies that are proven to radically improve classroom testing. A consequence of the lack of adoption of research-based strategies for test taking and design is a misalignment between student learning and testing that has implications for the integrity of the educational process in our classrooms. The purpose of this essay is to address the misalignment between summative testing and learning and to offer recommendations for better teaching, learning, and testing. While we address classroom summative assessment only, the strategies we recommend are applicable across a variety of testing contexts, including high-stakes, standardized testing. In Part I, we analyze how testing and learning work, and offer retrieval-enhanced learning theory as a bridge to the gap in misalignment between learning and testing. In Part II, we offer four practical recommendations for introducing retrieval-enhanced learning in classroom teaching. We conclude with implications for practice when student learning and testing are aligned.

Effective test-taking requires effective learning, the encoding of content knowledge or procedural skill, and its requisite storage in long-term memory (Karpicke, 2016). It also involves successful retrieval and application of that knowledge and skill in a testing environment. Faculty construct tests as a means of evaluating students’ content knowledge, understanding, and procedural skill. However, tests also involve a series of cognitive tasks (see Table 1) that must proceed without a glitch for students to succeed on a test. Many of these tasks are unrelated to the depth of students’ subject-matter knowledge or expertise. For example, the amount of space available in a student's working memory is entirely separate from the amount, and depth of understanding, of content knowledge in their long-term memory. Unfortunately, most students do not practice with enough frequency the key cognitive tasks involved in testing during self-directed learning or study (Karpicke et al., 2009). Rather, students spend the majority of their time out of the classroom engaging in rehearsal (Bransford et al., 2000). Concomitantly, while active learning is becoming increasingly popular in higher education, classroom instruction still primarily features passive learning through listening to lectures and note-taking. Reading, review, listening, and note-taking are cognitive tasks that encourage lower-order cognitive skills, such as retention and comprehension of knowledge. Though lower order, these tasks are vital to the successful encoding required for initial learning. However, tests rarely assess students’ abilities to listen, re-read, highlight, or take notes. The misalignment between learning and testing results when students focus the majority of their learning on rehearsal, rather than the series of cognitive tasks they will be required to engage in during testing, puts the integrity of the educational process of assessment at risk. Incorporating retrieval-enhanced learning theory into classroom practice has implications for student learning and teaching. Examples of ways to help bridge the gap between testing and learning include: 1) Providing direct instruction to students on the misalignment between frequent approaches to learning during class time, including a description of retrieval and its importance in the syllabus, and 2) Employing research-based strategies that help students practice the cognitive tasks engaged in testing in and out of class. Using retrieval-enhanced learning theory as a fundamental part of your teaching craft offers a powerful way to align testing and learning and to answer the enduring question, how do I authentically measure if my students are genuinely learning anything?

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来源期刊
Journal of Food Science Education
Journal of Food Science Education EDUCATION, SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINES-
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期刊介绍: The Institute of Food Technologists (IFT) publishes the Journal of Food Science Education (JFSE) to serve the interest of its members in the field of food science education at all levels. The journal is aimed at all those committed to the improvement of food science education, including primary, secondary, undergraduate and graduate, continuing, and workplace education. It serves as an international forum for scholarly and innovative development in all aspects of food science education for "teachers" (individuals who facilitate, mentor, or instruct) and "students" (individuals who are the focus of learning efforts).
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Issue Information Flipped laboratory classes: Student performance and perceptions in undergraduate food science and technology Next steps Student perspectives of various learning approaches used in an undergraduate food science and technology subject Grab the opportunity
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