Saturday, 25 May 2013

THE ROLE OF THE MARKING GUIDE TOWARDS QUALITY ASSESSMENT. IMPLICATIONS FOR SECONDARY SCHOOL TEACHERS IN UGANDA.




1.      Introduction
Assessment in schools has increased importance not only to the students and also the teachers but also the administrators, future employers and all stake holders of education. A fair assessment task is one in which students are given equitable opportunities to demonstrate their leaning (Lam, 1995).  Huba and Freed (2000,) define assessment as:-
The process of gathering and discussing information from multiple and diverse sources in order to develop a deep understanding of what students know, understand and can do with their knowledge as a result of their educational experiences; the process culminates when assessment results are used to improve subsequent learning.  
2.      Marking Guide:
Marking guide also called marking schemes in Australia and Uk are also referred to as rubrics in the USA. They are assessment tools that indicate the marking  criteria. They can be used in marking of students assessments (assignments, class participation, projects, examination or overall grades). They consist of the breakdown of marks available for an assessment. They may include model answers and show how marks are allocated for different aspects of a good answer. A marking guide can either specify the individual marks to be a warded or assign a group of marks to allow subjective and qualitative judgment to be made especially for essay type of questions

2.1   The benefits of the marking guide
The marking guide play an important role in criterion- referenced assessment ( whether individual students can achieve certain stated objectives).and many institutions of learning insist on their use. They explicitly explain how a student is graded and every mark is accounted for. This is beneficial to the teacher, student or the institution.
The advantages of a marking guide are;
a)      To academic staff
                                                              i.      Marking is both quicker and easier or reduces the amount of time the teacher spends on evaluating student’s work.
                                                            ii.      Preparation of the marking scheme ahead of time allows the teacher to review his or her own questions, to verify that they are really testing the material you want to test and to think about possible alternative answers that might come up.
                                                          iii.      Since the qualities of ‘good’ answer are predetermined and judgment applied to each assessment in turn, the judgment process is more likely to be free from bias (i.e fair).
                                                          iv.      Well drafted marking guides can minimize student questions about their results as the evaluation result is more transparent and informative.
                                                            v.      Students grow to trust assessment process where they are made transparent.
                                                          vi.      Teachers can communicate expectations for an assessment, provide focused feedback on works in progress and grade final products ( Andrade,2000;Goodrich 1997;Moskal,2003 Popham,1997).
                                                        vii.      Other people can use the same marking guide to mark assessment in case the setter is not available. 


b)     To Students

1.      Improvement in the quality of feedback when marking guides are made available after an assessment is completed. Students should be able to see where their answers deviate from the marking guides and thus how their work might have been improved ( Marzano,2002, Wolf and Stevens,2007).  
2.      Helps the students to recognize and match teachers’ expectations and encourage students’ autonomy ( Ramsden, 2000) there by promoting deep learning.
3.      Increase validity and reliability of assessment (Dunn,Morgan, O’Reilly and parry,2004 p17)



c)      To the School
1.      Assessment is objective and consistent thus helping in standardizing grading.
2.      Help in meeting quality assurance standards of the school.

Despite the advantages of a marking guide one objection to its use is that it makes academics vulnerable as students find it easier to challenge the grading decisions (Dunn, Morgan O’Reilly and Parry 2004 p230).




2.2   Qualities of a good Marking guide.
  
The following is check list for a high quality marking guide;
1)      Is the marking guide usable by the non experts?
A good marking guide should be able to be applied by any member of staff with sufficient knowledge to understand the answer.

2)  Does the guide allow credit for alternative good answers? All the reasonable ways of tackling the answer should be catered for.
3) Does the guide distribute marks according to the importance of each component of a good answer?.
4)  The balance of marks should be allocated to the most important points. It should not be possible to compensate for a bad answer by accumulating marks allocated to trivial point.
5)  Does the guide allow ‘consequential’ marks where an earlier mistake froe out the rest of an answer? It should not be possible for a student to make a mistake early in the question and then lose marks by proceeding logically and, in a sense, correctly down a  wrong route for example through a simple error of calculation.
6)   Does the guide make it quicker and easier to mark an assessment?. That marking guide should specify marking and not make the task more difficult.
7) Is the standard of marking as close as possible to that which will apply in subsequent assessment events?

 Marking guide constitute important elements of feedback for students. They indicate where marks are lost and won. This is only useful if practices are consistent so that what a student learns from one assignment feedback can be applied to the next.

Does the marking guide prevent students from ‘hedging’ their bets?
Student should not gain marks by putting down all they know on a particular topic and hoping the examiner will pick out the right things and reward them while ignoring the inappropriate or wrong things. Marking guides must therefore reward logical exposition and focused writing rather than ill informed regurgitation by speed writers.

Does the question point sufficiently towards the marking guide?  

When a marking guide has been prepared, review it and determine whether the question asked will lead the knowledgeable student to this answer. This will help to re-write the questions to remove ambiguities.   


2.3   Preparation and use of a marking guide
Draft marking guides should be prepared at the same time as the assessment is designed. Comparisons between what the students have been requested to do in the assignment and the associated marking guides will often highlight areas of ambiguity in the question or task. It will also facilitate judgment concerning the validity of the task (Does the marking guide represent a reasonable match with the Subject syllabus and the intended learning out comes?).  Marking guides should be sent to heads of departments with draft examination papers where appropriate for moderation.


Marking practices vary a lot with subjects. In some cases a marking guide will specify what a student will have to in order to be awarded each work. There is little room for the individual judgment. This is practical in some types of assignment such as numerical ones encountered in science and engineering. In arts where extended writing ( essays) are involved it may not be possible to specify precisely what a student will have to do in order to be awarded each mark. The marker has to exercise judgment concerning the extent to which each learning outcome has been demonstrated. The detail to be expected on the marking guide, therefore, cannot prescribed but must follow the potential variability of the answer.   


2.4   Marking guide for Essays;
The following outlines should be followed when preparing the marking guides for essay type of questions.
·         Make a model answer( outline answer)
·         Questions to consider are;

Ø  What key points do you expect in an answer? Can you prioritize them ( as a way of indicating a proportion of marks for each point)?
Ø   Should you allocate marks for other aspects of the work?
Ø  Does you model answer give an indication of the expected answer for different marking bands (i.e are there particular points that should affect the mark or grades awarded)?
·         A model answer may take different forms;
                                                                          I.            A list of factual content
                                                                       II.            A list of alternative interpretation to the set essay title.
                                                                    III.            A list of references or other sources.
·         Select the learning outcomes to which the assignment is testing i.e determine whether the marks awarded should be based solely on content (factual and illustrative) of the essay or whether some marks be awarded for structure and style.
  

Approaches to using a marking guide
 The following guidelines are helpful in the implementation of a marking guide;
a)      Review marking guide after examination. Once the examination has been done, read a few scripts and review the marking guide. You may sometimes find that students have interpreted your questions in a way that is different from what you have intended. Students may come up with excellent that may be slightly outside what you asked. Consider giving these students partial marks.
b)       You could start marking by giving an overall mark to a piece of work, based on an overall impression and then do detailed analysis against the marking guide. Alternatively you could start in an analytical way. Awarding marks for each part of the answer according to the marking guide and then seeing if the overall resultant marks feel right.
c)      For a large pile of work, especially exam scripts, you could combine the marking guide with following approach;

Ø  Read and assign a tentative grade to the first scripts before you start marking proper. This will give you a feel of the overall standards.
Ø  Skin through the scripts, sorting impressionistically into say five grade piles (for example ABCDE). Alternatively try to put them into rank order and the note where the grade boundaries fall.
Ø  Mark all the scripts.
Ø   When you have finished marking, check back with the first five you marked to make sure your standards haven’t drifted up or down.
Ø  Draw a few at random from the pile and mark them again. Check with your original mark. If you’re standard has not changed, WHY?
d)     When marking make notes on scripts. These will make in clear why you gave a particular mark.
Recommendations
It is not only the setting of assessment which affects their validity and reliability but also how they are marked (graded). In order to enforce the use of the marking guide and make it contribute to a fairer assessment in secondary schools in Uganda, the following recommendations are made;
a)      Before dispatch of the draft question papers to the Director of studies office in a school, the heads of departments should ensure that the subject teacher has provided, draft questions together with marking guide.
b)      After marking has been done by the subject teachers the heads of departments should receive scripts, marking guides, question papers, Midterm results (Examination file) from every subject teacher.
c)      Secondary schools may have to put in place a policy regarding use marking guide for all forms of assessment and a mechanism of monitoring its use.
d)     There is need for sensitization workshops for secondary school teachers on the use of a marking guide and its implementation.
e)      There is need for the National teacher training colleges in Uganda and the institutions of  higher learning to teach the teachers the pedagogical aspects of making a marking guide.



Conclusion
Marking guide can be used for all assessment including oral presentations, essays, course work, reports and final examinations. In addition to many benefits to the staff, Students and institutions discussed above marking guide also helps to minimize complaints about grading. Marking guides should be used for all assessments and the teachers in Islamic university in Uganda should devise means to make sure that students are familiar with them in giving feedback to enhance learning.







REFERENCES
Huba, M. a. (2000). Learner centered assesment on college campuses- Shifting the focus from teaching to learninng. Allyn and Bacon.
Lam, T. (1995, August monday). Fairness in performance assessment. chicago, United states of America. Retrieved April monday, 2012, from http://www.enric.ed.gov
Marzano, R. (2002). A Comparison of selected methods of scoring classroom Assessments.Applied Measurement in Education.
Moskal B, M. (2003). Recommendations for developing classroom performance assessment and scoring rubrics. Practical assessment,Research and Evaluation.
Popham, J. (1997). What is wrong and what is right with rubrics. Education leardership,55(2),72-75.
Ramsden, P. (2000). Learning to teach in Higher Education. London: Rouledge Falmer.
Ramsden, P. (2003). Learning to teach in Higher Education. London: Rouledge Falmer.
Wolf, K. S. (2007). The role of Rubrics in advancing and assessing Students learning. The journal of effective teaching , vol.7 No. 1,3-14.

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