SDCC Keynote | Jason Gulya
When it comes to the future of assessment, I think it's all right for faculty to create buckets.
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Bucket 1: Short-term changes that get us thorugh the day, the week, or the month.
We can revise assessments by grounding them in other modules or in-class activities, using multimedia, or including a synchronous component.
Maybe these end up being band-aids.
That's all right.
Band-aids are useful.
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Bucket #2: Long-term changes
These are things like shifting to process-focused assignments, creating a culture of transparency, or shifting to alternative assessment.
I think they'll have longer shelflives.
But they take a while to set up.
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We can't do everthing all at once.
I think it's perfectly all right to do small changes that get us through the semester, and recognize that we'll need bigger, more systemic changes down the road.
That's what I talked about during my keynote at San Diego Community College District.
We talked about how to manage those buckets.
It's a key part of the conversation, because on surefire way to create change paralysis is to say "change everything about what you teach, right now."