You are on page 1of 2

Daydreaming or Deep in Thought?

Using Formative
Assessment to Evaluate Student Participation
By Carolyn Ives
Many instructors will argue that student participation in class is important. But what's the difference between
participation and engagement? What does good participation or engagement look like? How can you recognize
it? And how can you tell if a student is not engaged?
Typically, instructors see a student who willingly participates as one who is engaged, and research shows that
students who are engaged often take active roles in their own learning (Weaver and Qi, qtd. in Rogers, 2013,
p. 11). However, research also debates whether we can actually see engagement: there isn't always a clear
relationship between mental and physical engagement. Meaningful engagement may be happening, even when it
isn't visible (Mayer, 2009, qtd. in Rogers, 2013, p. 12).
This is just one of the many challenges that faculty face while trying to evaluate class participation. Other factors
can also make this difficult:
Difficulty in assessing engagement or participation by observation alone;
Attendance issues, particularly in large classes;
Varied emphasis on participation from course to course;
Varied types of participation;
Difficulty of documenting student participation in a reliable way;
Concern about biases; and
Concern about unfair penalization of shy or introverted students.
With all these challenges, some instructors opt not to assign grades to participation at all. In fact, Bean and
Peterson (1998, p. 33) note "assessment and measurement scholars almost universally advise against gradi ng
participation" (Rogers, 2013, p. 11) because of the difficulty in creating consistent methods of evaluation. Other
complicating factors include the fact that the promise of a higher grade does not necessarily ensure greater
participation, and some forms of participation are more desirable than others. Some kinds are even disruptive:
students who speak simply in an effort to achieve high participation grades are not always assets to classroom
discussion.
Formative assessment strategies So, then, how can instructors facilitate student engagement and helpful
participation? There are a few strategies that can help, many of which you can find discussed in more detail in
other Faculty Focus articles, such as the creation of a supportive classroom environment that is skilfully
facilitated and discussion-based, the creation of clear expectations around student preparation and student roles
in the classroom, and creating student buy-in (Czekanski and Wolf, 2013, p. 11-12; Weimer and Walvoord, 2013).
All of these strategies are helpful, but the most useful method I have found to evaluate student participation is the
inclusion of formative assessment techniques in my classes.
Formative assessment may take a variety of forms (such as practice quizzes, one-minute papers,
clearest/muddiest point exercises, various kinds of group work in the class, etc.), but it provides students with
opportunities to practice skills or test knowledge in a "safe" way. It usually consists of low-stakes and/or
ungraded (or peer- or self-evaluated) activities, and these can be combined to comprise all or part of a participation
grade. You can make it do double (or triple or quadruple) duty by allowing the formative assessment activities to
scaffold into your summative assessments, by using formative assessment activities to provide you with student
feedback about how the course is going, and by using it to create a reflective culture of assessment that is focused
on learning rather than solely on grades.
So how does it work? When I use formative assessment strategies to assess student participation, I allocate a
certain number of points to each formative assessment activity; this allocation depends on the percentage I've
allocated to participation in the course and how many assessments I use. For some activities, I give full points for
completion; for others, I actually grade the activity itself. The formative assessments are all subject to my regular
assignments policies, and students must be in class to participate in the activities.
My results have been overwhelmingly positive. By no longer relying on attendance and my observations in class
to grade participation, these formative assessment activities have delivered a number of benefits for both my
students and me:
They encourage attendance;
They allow even very shy students to earn participation grades;
If I design the formative assessment to scaffold into summative evaluation, students see the value of it
and are likely to participate in a meaningful way;
Because most of the formative assessment activities are worth points, students are more likely to take the
activities seriously and put forth the effort;
They allow learners to demonstrate knowledge in multiple ways;
They provide tangible evidence of student engagement (or not) and learning (or not);
They encourage students to reflect on their own learning, especially if the formative assessment
techniques require any self-evaluation;
They tell me about how well my students are learning the material, and provide me with feedback about
how my course is progressing.
Participation can be a challenge to grade because it often contains many different elements that instructors need
to consider, sometimes on the fly. Many strategies can help, including the creation of clear expectations in the form
of a rubric, as well as other other classroom techniques as mentioned. However, of all the options I've tried, I have
found the use of formative assessment my best option for assessing engagement and participation as it can
help to create a culture of self-reflection and assessment that is focused on learning rather than on only grades.
References:
Czekanski, Kathleen E. and Zane Robinson Wolf. (2013). Encouraging and evaluating class participation. Journal
of University Teaching & Learning Practice, 10 (1). Retrieved 7 July 2013 from ERIC database.
Rogers, Susan L. (2013). Calling the question: Do college instructors actually grade participation? College
Teaching, 61, 11-22. Retrieved 7 July 2013 from ERIC database.
Weimer, M. and Walvoord, B. (2013). Grading Strategies for the College Classroom. Madison, WI: Magna
Publications.
Carolyn Ives is the Curriculum Planning and Development Coordinator at the Centre for the Advancement of
Faculty Excellence at MacEwan University, Canada.

You might also like