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Incremental Self-Assessment Rubrics for Capstone Design Courses
Author(s) -
James Trevelyan
Publication year - 2015
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/p.24288
Subject(s) - rubric , capstone , peer assessment , computer science , context (archaeology) , tutor , standards based assessment , self assessment , mathematics education , psychology , educational assessment , pedagogy , algorithm , paleontology , biology , programming language
Design educators today face at least three major challenges: large classes, students with little practical knowledge, and teaching staff with little design experience or understanding of engineering practice. This paper provides suggestions on how these challenges can be overcome and, in particular, how self-assessment rubrics can help eliminate much of the traditional design course assessment workload for teachers. This paper provides suggestions for preparing incremental self-assessment rubrics for a capstone design course. While both selfand peer-assessment can provide significant assessment time-saving for tutors, selfassessment also promotes student learning, according to recent education research. Appropriately designed rubrics can also provide students with guidance on levels of attainment required for design tasks and students also learn to assess design quality.

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