Assessing Student Learning and Perceptions in an Upper-level General Education Requirement Argumentation Course

This project addressed the difficulties of teaching argument skills, a staple of liberal education, to a mixture of Communication majors and non-majors taking the course for General Education Requirement (GER) credit. The design uses independent instructor comparison of students’ pre- and post-test...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kathryn Olson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Georgia Southern University 2009-01-01
Series:International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol3/iss1/23
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spelling doaj-1f4c25455fb6442db356974ed4c870cc2020-11-25T00:07:03ZengGeorgia Southern UniversityInternational Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning1931-47442009-01-013110.20429/ijsotl.2009.030123Assessing Student Learning and Perceptions in an Upper-level General Education Requirement Argumentation CourseKathryn OlsonThis project addressed the difficulties of teaching argument skills, a staple of liberal education, to a mixture of Communication majors and non-majors taking the course for General Education Requirement (GER) credit. The design uses independent instructor comparison of students’ pre- and post-test performances, students’ comparative self-evaluation of their pre- and post-test performances, as well as students’ reflections on their learning in response to a separate questionnaire and independent instructor assessment of their performance in arguing those reflective claims, to analyze learning processes in an upper-level argumentation course. The results include specific content concepts and course and instructor strategies that both majors and non-majors credit for improvements in their argument skills, suggestions for assessing whether GER courses meet their learning outcome goals, and analysis of the importance of attending to students’ own perceptions of and justifications for changes (or lack thereof) in their performances on tasks tied to liberal learning outcomes.https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol3/iss1/23ArgumentationGeneral Education RequirementsLearnersLiberal educationSoTLTeaching argument
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kathryn Olson
spellingShingle Kathryn Olson
Assessing Student Learning and Perceptions in an Upper-level General Education Requirement Argumentation Course
International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
Argumentation
General Education Requirements
Learners
Liberal education
SoTL
Teaching argument
author_facet Kathryn Olson
author_sort Kathryn Olson
title Assessing Student Learning and Perceptions in an Upper-level General Education Requirement Argumentation Course
title_short Assessing Student Learning and Perceptions in an Upper-level General Education Requirement Argumentation Course
title_full Assessing Student Learning and Perceptions in an Upper-level General Education Requirement Argumentation Course
title_fullStr Assessing Student Learning and Perceptions in an Upper-level General Education Requirement Argumentation Course
title_full_unstemmed Assessing Student Learning and Perceptions in an Upper-level General Education Requirement Argumentation Course
title_sort assessing student learning and perceptions in an upper-level general education requirement argumentation course
publisher Georgia Southern University
series International Journal for the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
issn 1931-4744
publishDate 2009-01-01
description This project addressed the difficulties of teaching argument skills, a staple of liberal education, to a mixture of Communication majors and non-majors taking the course for General Education Requirement (GER) credit. The design uses independent instructor comparison of students’ pre- and post-test performances, students’ comparative self-evaluation of their pre- and post-test performances, as well as students’ reflections on their learning in response to a separate questionnaire and independent instructor assessment of their performance in arguing those reflective claims, to analyze learning processes in an upper-level argumentation course. The results include specific content concepts and course and instructor strategies that both majors and non-majors credit for improvements in their argument skills, suggestions for assessing whether GER courses meet their learning outcome goals, and analysis of the importance of attending to students’ own perceptions of and justifications for changes (or lack thereof) in their performances on tasks tied to liberal learning outcomes.
topic Argumentation
General Education Requirements
Learners
Liberal education
SoTL
Teaching argument
url https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/ij-sotl/vol3/iss1/23
work_keys_str_mv AT kathrynolson assessingstudentlearningandperceptionsinanupperlevelgeneraleducationrequirementargumentationcourse
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