2021
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jchemed.1c00532
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You Are What You Assess: The Case for Emphasizing Chemistry on Chemistry Assessments

Abstract: What we emphasize and reward on assessments signals to students what matters to us. Accordingly, a great deal of scholarship in chemistry education has focused on defining the sorts of performances worth assessing. Here, we unpack observations we made while analyzing what “success” meant across three large-enrollment general chemistry environments. We observed that students enrolled in two of the three environments could succeed without ever connecting atomic/molecular behavior to how and why phenomena happen.… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(63 citation statements)
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“…There is ample evidence that assessments tell students what sort of intellectual work is valued in a course (Biggs, 1996;Crooks, 1988;Entwistle, 1991;Momsen et al, 2013;Scouller, 1998;Scouller & Prosser, 1994;Snyder, 1973). As in prior research (Stowe et al, 2020(Stowe et al, , 2021, we continue to argue that characterizing the performances allotted points on assessments is necessary to understand "what counts" in a given learning environment. Suppose an instructor emphasizes using knowledge to predict and explain phenomena during instruction, but the recall of facts can answer all exam questions.…”
Section: Characterizing Assessment Emphasismentioning
confidence: 90%
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“…There is ample evidence that assessments tell students what sort of intellectual work is valued in a course (Biggs, 1996;Crooks, 1988;Entwistle, 1991;Momsen et al, 2013;Scouller, 1998;Scouller & Prosser, 1994;Snyder, 1973). As in prior research (Stowe et al, 2020(Stowe et al, , 2021, we continue to argue that characterizing the performances allotted points on assessments is necessary to understand "what counts" in a given learning environment. Suppose an instructor emphasizes using knowledge to predict and explain phenomena during instruction, but the recall of facts can answer all exam questions.…”
Section: Characterizing Assessment Emphasismentioning
confidence: 90%
“…To support claims that particular interventions or learning environment designs improve the status quo, we argue that researchers should ensure the outcome measure(s) used in their studies engage students in performances of justifiable import. If outcome measures predominately assess recall and decontextualized math skills (as has been observed in prior works; Stowe et al, 2021), "improved outcomes" may amount to improved recall of trivia or success with "plugging and chugging." Recall and execution of rote skills are far from the most critical objectives of chemistry courses and, we argue, should not be the focus of reformed science courses.…”
Section: The Importance Of the Outcome Variable(s) Defines The Value ...mentioning
confidence: 91%
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