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
The MTU Library Assignment Toolkit includes a suite of modules that guides students through the assignment completion process and provides a grounding in academic integrity by using best practice guidance at every stage.
The modules include the following:
- Getting to Know Your Library
- Critical Thinking Skills
- Misinformation
- Effective Searching
- Reading Academic Material and Planning for Assignments
- Understanding Plagiarism
- Assignment Writing
- Referencing
This tool will be of significant help to new students, but also a great refresher for those with some academic experience behind them.
It is also a significant asset to academic staff as a rich, interactive resource that can support their students with their studies.
The Assignment Toolkit is hosted on Canvas and requires you to enrol on the course.
Course Modules can be taken in sequence or students can choose to start with a particular module.
BALI Demystifyinig staff student partnerships in assessment and feedback
"BALI - Building Assessment Literacy Initiative - is a project to develop a suite of resources to support students and staff in the growth of competencies and capabilities in Assessment Literacy (AL). It aims to bring an interdisciplinary approach to the co-creation of these resources, with student-staff partnership at its core.
In this session, participants heard about the most recent outcomes of the BALI project, where 3 teams comprised of a mix of staff and students co-created assessment and feedback resources in a partnership-based approach. We got a peek under the bonnet of the partnership-based approach hearing from both the staff and student’s perspective."
Developing Assessment Literacy in Students – Intentional Interventions
"The power of assessment and feedback within the learning process has been recognised for many years and yet the paradigms that currently frame assessment leave students in a passive role and still largely focus on accreditation. This situation needs to be challenged through the development of assessment literacy of both staff and students which, in turn will make new approaches to assessment and feedback possible.
This seminar discussed the nature of assessment literacy, why it is important, how it has the potential to reshape our thinking about assessment and feedback and how it supports the development of student learning. Participants were invited to take part in activities designed to allow them to share their expertise, review their practices and take away new ideas.
The aim of the seminar was to:
Explain the concept of assessment literacy
Describe the contribution assessment literacy can make to supporting student learning
Identify key initiatives that support the development of assessment literacy"