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Plenum: NY,
1997. Part 1: Lower-Division Courses. 199 pp. ISBN:
0-306-45580-3. $24.95. Part 2: Upper-Division Courses. 135 pp.
ISBN: 0-306-45581-1. $22.95.
Sheila Tobias is well known in the science
education community for pointing out different perspectives on the
faculty/student relationship. Her past works, including
They Aren't Dumb, They're Different: Stalking the Second
Tier (1990) and Revitalizing Undergraduate Science: Why Some
Things Work and Most Don't (1992), emphasized the differences in faculty perceptions of student learning needs and actual
student learning needs.
The two-volume current work, coauthored by
Jacqueline Raphael, focuses on testing practices in college
science courses. The major point is that the style and content of
tests (and grading in general) are important facets of the
communication between instructor and student. The two
volumes begin with several chapters presenting faculty and
student perspectives on testing. The bulk of each book features
case studies of innovative testing methods, organized by
scientific discipline (biology, chemistry, geology, physics, assorted).
For example, the chemistry section of part 1 has 36
individual case studies, each one to two pages in length; the
chemistry section in part 2 has 27 similar presentations. Actually,
the examples presented in parts 1 and 2 are very similar to
each other. Distinctive testing strategies have more to do with
the instructor's style than with the level of the course
being taught.
The individual examples of innovation are based
on solicited submissions by a wide variety of
faculty across the nation. Rather than a cohesive integrated package, they
serve as individual ideas that a reader could consider for
adaptation and adoption. A wide range of ideas are
represented, starting with course grading schemes that offer
students choices, chances to redeem poor performances, and
various curving approaches. Many ideas pertinent to
individual exams are included, such as test-taking by
groups working together, ways of getting instructor assistance
during exams (with partial loss of credit), use of conceptual questions
in addition to math related questions, and oral testing.
In summary, these two books contain a variety of
ideas an interested instructor can use to develop new testing
approaches, along with some discussion of the educational
reasons for new modes of testing. I found the compiled
examples to be mostly familiar - ideas already seen in other
settings - rather than brand new innovations. Nevertheless, seeing
them brought together in this concise compiled format will
make it easy for educators to consider a wide range of possible
improvements in the testing aspect of college-level instruction.
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