Abstract

As more instructors articulate learning objectives for their students within one course, or academic staff collaborate to articulate learning outcomes for programs, a robust means to assess student performance within these becomes increasingly important. The Examinations Institute of the American Chemical Society (ACS), Division of Chemical Education, has recently published content maps that utilise a structure of subdiscipline-independent fundamental concepts narrowing down to content details that are specific to subdisciplines. This structure has then been utilised to align items and can be used to assess student performance throughout a program. Learning objectives that are designed for a course can then be aligned to the framework and used to gauge student learning within a course or across a program. One key to making well-informed instructional decisions is to obtain as much valid information from such assessment work as possible. This paper describes the combination of using a rubric for assigning complexity with scaling student performance to gauge achieving learning objectives that are aligned to fundamental concepts in the content maps in general chemistry and organic chemistry. It can be argued that information in these forms can provide useful guidance for designing improved instruction. Â

Highlights

  • Classroom instruction, unique to the instructor, has many common or unifying features

  • Utilising assessment data to make informed decisions about what students know is a critical component of classroom instructional design and extends into judgments about programs through programmatic assessment

  • The combined use of complexity ratings and content placement of exam items allows for the calculation of a scaled difficulty value that can be aggregated for a

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Summary

Introduction

Unique to the instructor, has many common or unifying features. These include aspects of the course itself from the use of assessment to the order and depth of content. Other features can include the use of learning objectives to communicate to the students what they will expect to learn in the course and how they will be assessed These assessments can be used by the course instructor to assign the level of content knowledge that individual students exhibit as well as providing information about the class as a whole. In order to connect assessment data between tests within one course or between courses within one program, a method is required to align both the content and the difficulty of the individual assessment items in order to provide information collectively about what students know

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