Abstract
This paper presents the changes performed in a university course to adopt European Higher Education Area principles taking advantage of new technologies and educational approaches. Particularly, a Flipped Classroom model that also involves an Intensive Continuous Assessment approach is adopted, moving the presentation of theoretical contents to videos that can be watched outside of the classroom and using the classroom face-to-face time to provide explanations, problem solving and to perform assessment activities every week. A main part of innovation in the experience comes from the use of an online tool (BeA – Blended e-Assessment) that facilitates the assessment and reviewing of paper-based exams. This tool supports teachers in assessment tasks, that can be performed in a faster, simpler, more transparent and less error-prone way. The paper shows the results of an experience involving a control group and an experimentation group, in which this new approach and tool have been applied. The results obtained demonstrate the effectiveness of both proposals. In conjunction, the paper describes how a traditional university course based on lectures can be successfully adapted to a more innovative approach based on the principles of active learning and accountability thanks to the use of our blended e-Assessment tool.
Highlights
The European Higher Education Area (EHEA) and Bologna process have promoted and introduced many changes in the way higher education institutions develop their teaching and learning activities
Once the papers concerning to intensive continuous assessment were addressed, we focus on the works related to flipped classroom
We can conclude that the flipped classroom methodology is being used more and more, and that there are few works focused on an intense continuous assessment, understood as the performance of weekly exercises in which the grades obtained have an important weight in the final grade of a subject
Summary
The European Higher Education Area (EHEA) and Bologna process have promoted and introduced many changes in the way higher education institutions develop their teaching and learning activities. Considering the new concepts and capabilities provided by new technologies, we decided to explore an approach based on flipped classroom and on intensive continuous assessment supported by a specific tool This tool is BeA (Blended e-Assessment), a web application that enables us to perform written exams in classrooms, in a traditional way, but to assess and review them online. We show how we have adapted our teaching in a Computers Architecture course to the EHEA principles supported by this tool, including the results obtained taking into account academic performance and students’ satisfaction This process has involved the introduction of changes in the subject organization, resources provided to the students, and assessment activities.
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