Carol Gering






         Just a place to post random thoughts

October 23, 2008

Pre-Grading

Filed under: Teaching Tips — carol @ 8:01 pm
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I’m reading a booknew to me, but ten years old—titled Effective Grading: A tool for learning and assessment. I didn’t glean much from the first seven chapters, other than a few new structures for grading rubrics. Midway through the book, however, I’ve come to a chapter on “Making Grading More Time-Efficient” that has sparked some ideas. Of the nine principles listed in this chapter, one really caught my attention: Use what the student knows. I plan to try it in my Desktop Publishing class next week.

My primary assessments in the Desktop Publishing course are projects. The next assignment due is a one-page magazine article. These projects are always time-consuming to grade; it takes a while to review each of their computer files to see how they’ve implemented the requirements before writing feedback. As Effective Grading points out, I may be spending a lot of time trying to discover things my students already know. (”I knew I didn’t have that lined up properly” or “I knew I used too many fonts in this design.”)

The strategy I’m about to try is a Pre-Grading sheet that each student will turn in along with their assignment. In addition to saving me time, I hope it will help students learn to self-evaluate more effectively. Seems like an ingenious idea to me—but not all my ideas turn out to be as brilliant as I envision. I’ll let you know how it goes. You can view my pre-grading sheet on Issuu.

October 22, 2008

InDesign to Flash

Filed under: All things Adobe — carol @ 2:09 pm
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I have to admit I haven’t yet spent much time looking into the new features of Adobe CS4 products—that’s on my things-to-do list for next month, when I’m planning to attend Adobe Max 2008. As a preview, however, I’m particularly intrigued by the new features that allow InDesign to export working swf files as well as xfl files (ready to import natively into the Flash authoring environment). This clip from Adobe TV gives a demo. It’s about 30 minutes long, and you have to persevere through a bit of cheesiness at the beginning. (The part where he speaks to plush stuffed toys only lasts for seconds…resist the urge to turn it off there! Seriously.) It’s really a fascinating idea, and I’m looking forward to exploring it further.