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2. Assessment and exam

How will you measure that the students have learned what you want?

After you have specified the learning outcomes as part of the planning stage, you need to make a plan for how to assess if the students have achieved the intended outcomes. The assessments can take place both during the semester, for example through written assignments or multiple-choice tests, as well as an exam at the end of the semester.

In general, it is common to distinguish between formative and summative assessment:

Formative assessment

Formative assessment takes place during the course of the teaching, and the goal is to support the students' academic development, for example by providing feedback on assignments, calculations, lab reports or oral presentations. Formative assessment is primarily used without grading.

The strength of formative assessment is that it provides a direction for the student's learning process. Students will have the opportunity to discover what they have learned and what they need to learn in the future, and they will gain increased awareness of their own learning.

Formative assessment can also provide you as a teacher with useful information about students' academic development, and the extent to which your course plan works according to your intention.

Summative assessment

Summative assessment typically takes place after the end of the course, and provides a summary of what the students have learned. Exams are graded A-F or pass/fail.

There are a number of options for choosing the form of the exam, and the key is to choose the form that best allows students to demonstrate the degree to which they have reached the learning outcomes for the course. Different variants of written, oral or practical exams can be used individually, or in collaboration. It is more and more common to use home exams, portfolio assessment, oral exams and project work as exam forms.

It is possible to use the learning outcomes for the course to distinguish between different students' learning outcomes and to support grading.

Example linking learning outcomes to assessment forms

The example below shows the interaction between learning outcomes and different forms of assessment.

In discussions, students have the opportunity to work with all the learning goals along the way, and can use formative feedback from fellow students and educators to advance in the learning process. The oral exam tests all four learning goals and thus the entire learning outcome.

Learning outcomes