posted on 2006-05-18, 17:23authored byPete Thomas, Dean Taylor
Tutor Marked Assignments (TMAs) are the major mechanism by which Open
University (OU) students receive feedback on their academic progress. This
paper shows how the OU has used ICT to improve both the quality of feedback
and speed of response to student work, reduce feelings of isolation and make the
university seem less remote. The paper examines the system for online
submission and return of TMAs, their on-screen marking, and the automated
processing of scores and feedback. It shows how the system provides effective
feedback to students and their tutors, using ICT to underpin the overall
assessment process, and enables new teaching strategies to be used at an
institutional level.
The system produces faster turnaround of marked TMAs, faster feedback to
tutors on their performance and more up to date management information. Better
quality feedback to students has also resulted from an interactive loop of
dialogue between student and tutor, and improved management information for
monitoring. The automated recording of TMA scores has lead to improved
accuracy of assessment records that feed into the conflation of continuous
assessment records with examination results to produce the overall course
results.
These developments have enabled course teams to develop new methods of
assessment, such as electronic format assignments (e.g. websites and
hyperlinked documents), executable files, dynamic templates and other
interactive activities.
History
School
University Academic and Administrative Support
Department
Professional Development
Research Unit
CAA Conference
Pages
99387 bytes
Citation
THOMAS and TAYLOR, 2000. Reducing the distance in distance education. Proceedings of the 4th CAA Conference, Loughborough: Loughborough University