Reflect on Learning from Failure (Framework)

(Difference between revisions)
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 100: Line 100:
 
| X
 
| X
 
| X
 
| X
 
|-
 
| '''Criterion'''
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
 
|-
 
| '''Criterion'''
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
 
|-
 
| '''Criterion'''
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
 
|-
 
| '''Criterion'''
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
|
 
  
 
|}
 
|}

Revision as of 18:20, 19 November 2016


Title Framework Reflection on Learning from Failure
Overview We want students to understand how much they are learning from their failures during the course instead of getting frustrated over it
Prerequisite Knowledge This framework can potentially be integrated for any of the courses using FOSS continuously.
Learning Objectives Reflect on their progress in a project or course.

Background

Readings

Rationale

  • Students will get critiqued in the world they'll enter into. They need to learn how to deal with that in a constructive way.
  • Go look at someone else's code - can you understand it? If yes, students will start feeling more confident. Also, it reinforces how important code documentation is.
  • Model behavior for students in the classroom and have students suggest what to put in there, then discuss them. How can that be scaffolded?
  • Here’s some code that’s not working, do a quick quiz in class and let them find out why. Then put up “this is what most people think why it doesn’t work. Now go try fix it.”


Directions & deliverables

  • Micro-reflections
    • Regular interval during class, e.g. every 30 minutes in class
    • Prompt: Submit a commit message where students state their current stage of thought/problem-solving process, snapshot of where they’re at. If collecting them in a different place is preferred, a shared doc is an option.
    • Index card / Post-its if computers aren’t in use (and public, can optionally be categorized), but would have to be written up / redistributed / photographed if they are supposed to be available to the students for macro reflections.
    • There is a social aspect to sharing them as tangible artifacts help students to relate and see the social skills for a moment instead of the technology. Color coded notes/notecards could be used for various categories (technical, communication, big picture, etc.)
  • Mini-reflections (weekly; outside of class):
    • Blog
    • Wiki
    • Prompt a different category every week: soft skills, technical aspect, communication, organization
  • Final/macro/meta Reflections (1-3 at milestones/checkpoints; outside of class):
    • Milestones: start of the semester (survey), middle of semester (survey), end of semester (survey and essay)
    • Surveys: use existing FOSS surveys and maybe add a couple of questions
    • Short essay with reflection at the end (using their micro reflections) and the prompt to reflect on how they learned from failure.
  • Progress visualization over an academic term...
    • How can we (help students) visualize progress? Charting on the following fronts:
    • Let students set a goal - may be unrealistic but they engage more if they can contribute creatively
    • Level of frustration, just for giggles, hoping it goes down over the semester ;)
    • Learning goals / objectives (for the course, as determined by instructor)
    • Data collection via Moodle/BlackBoard/whatever your course is already using

Notes for Instructors

The remaining sections of this document are intended for the instructor. They are not part of the learning activity that would be given to students.

Assessment

How will the activity be graded? The larger the reflection, the more weight it gets assigned.

  • The micro reflections are not graded on content, just on process (which basically means whether students did them or not).
  • The mini reflections can be graded using questions below.
  • The macro reflection can be graded using same and further questions.
  • The data tracking is graded on process - did they submit their numbers or not.

How will learning will be measured? Ideally, there should be a way to measure each of the objectives described above.


How will feedback to the student be determined?


Include sample assessment questions/rubrics. Feel free to indicate that the activity itself is not graded, however it would be helpful to include any questions that might be used at a later date to interpret learning, for example on a quiz or exam.

The form of the assessment is expected to vary by assignment. One possible format is the table:

Criteria Level 1 (fail) Level 2 (pass) Level 3 (good) Level 4 (exceptional)
How well did they follow the prompt on what to write about? X
Did they describe their observations well? X X
Did they draw conclusions from their observations? X X X
Did they conclude lessons learned? X X X X

Comments:

What should the instructor know before using this activity?

What are some likely difficulties that an instructor may encounter using this activity?

Additional Information:

ACM Knowledge Area/Knowledge Unit Depends on the activity this framework is used in ACM_Body_of_Knowledge
ACM Topic Soft skills: Reflection (not in ACM but it's the topic)
Level of Difficulty Carrying out the writing tasks is easy, doing a good reflection is medium.
Estimated Time to Completion Micro: 30 seconds, Mini: 10-30 minutes, Macro: 2 hours
Materials/Environment Internet access if carried out on blog.
Author(s) Birgit Penzenstadler, Emily Lovell, Mario Nakazawa, Scott Heggen, Matt Jadud
Source n.a.
License This learning activity is available for use under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License. Attribution need not include a link back to this site.

Suggestions for Open Source Community:

This framework seems to be more about reflection in any course context where students can fail than specifically OSS. We are not sure what suggestions may arise from that for the open source community.

CC-BY.png

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Events
Learning Resources
HFOSS Projects
Evaluation
Navigation
Toolbox