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NAIN Generative AI Guidelines for Educators August 2023
NAIN Generative AI Guidelines for Educators August 2023
Developed by the National Academic Integrity Network (NAIN), The NAIN guidelines are structured, and the recommendations are classified under the following four headings: • What everyone needs to know • What lecturers and educators need to know and do • What programme managers and institutional leads need to know and do • What students need to know and do
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NAIN Generative AI Guidelines for Educators August 2023
MTU TACIT Guide 9 - Using Exemplars to enhance learning and support achievement
MTU TACIT Guide 9 - Using Exemplars to enhance learning and support achievement
When we present students with unfamiliar assessment formats, it can be difficult for them to work out what is expected of them and more difficult on occasions for them to recognise what kind of work is good enough to match required standards. If we are able to show rather than just tell them what we are looking for, they are more likely to achieve higher standards. Exemplars are a well-established means of helping students get the hang of new-to-them assessment genres and can save a lot of anguish on both sides.
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MTU TACIT Guide 9 - Using Exemplars to enhance learning and support achievement
MTU TACIT Guide 8 - Helping students appreciate what's expected of them in assessment; Developing students' assessment literacy
MTU TACIT Guide 8 - Helping students appreciate what's expected of them in assessment; Developing students' assessment literacy
Students, especially those from diverse cultural backgrounds, often find the first assignment on a course really challenging, particularly if they are ‘first in family’ to go to university and may therefore have a limited understanding of what is likely to be expected of them. It therefore pays dividends if staff put resources and energy into helping students get to know the rules of the game. Students may be able to successfully manage the unfamiliarity of new learning contexts and classroom environments that are very different to what they have experienced before. However, they can’t avoid the need to be successful in assessment if they are to progress. It’s part of our job therefore to help students overcome any uneasiness, and the best way to do this is to demystify the process and give them stress-free opportunities to practice the competencies they eventually need to demonstrate to meet the learning outcomes
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MTU TACIT Guide 8 - Helping students appreciate what's expected of them in assessment; Developing students' assessment literacy
MTU TACIT Guide 7 - Getting students to self assess to deepen their learning and develop feedback dialogues
MTU TACIT Guide 7 - Getting students to self assess to deepen their learning and develop feedback dialogues
Many authors (including Nicol, 2010 and Carless, 2013) suggest that good feedback should always be a dialogue, not a monologue from tutors. Students can become very good at self-assessing their work, but usually don’t have the opportunity to fine-tune their self-assessment and need feedback to help them on their way. If we just ask: ‘try to work out what your mark or grade is?’ they’re likelyvto just guess, and then probably forget what they guessed. While some students might select a grade close to that which you gave them, studies show that ‘high achievers’ underestimate their abilities and the majority of under-achievers will overestimate their mark. Research shows (Clouder, Broughan, Jewell & Steventon, 2012) that this trend is retained across different nationalities but interestingly, students form different nationalities can also have different perspectives of their abilities. Therefore, we need to educate students about making assessment judgements against well-expressed criteria, just as we try to do when we assess their work.
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MTU TACIT Guide 7 - Getting students to self assess to deepen their learning and develop feedback dialogues