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Calibrated Peer Review (CPR)TM at Texas A

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Title: Calibrated Peer Review (CPR)TM at Texas A


1
  • Calibrated Peer Review (CPR)TMat Texas AM
    University
  • by Dr. Wendy Keeney-Kennicutt
  • Associate Director, First Year Chemistry Program
  • CPR Master Administrator, TAMU
  • k-keeney_at_tamu.edu

2
HISTORY AT TAMUcpr.tamu.edu
  • 2002 - CPRTM was introduced to First Year
    Chemistry in an NSF-sponsored Multi- Initiative
    Dissemination spring workshop and a CPR summer
    workshop. We started in the fall.
  • 2003 - To avoid FERPA issues because of a
    joint NSF CPR grant with UCLA and our Center
    for Teaching Excellence, CPR was housed on a
    secure TAMU server.
  • 2003 - I volunteered to be the CPRTM
    master administrator because of experience.

Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (1974)
protects the privacy of student education
records
3
USE OF CPRTM AT TAMU
  • In the last 3 years, the use of CPRTM at TAMU
    been used by approximately
  • 10,000 undergraduate and graduate students doing
  • 320 new assignments in
  • 200 courses spread over
  • 30 majors in
  • 7 colleges. 

4
MAJORS USING CPRTM
  • Accounting
  • Ag. Economics
  • Animal Science
  • Archeology
  • Biochemistry
  • Biology
  • Botany
  • Bus. Admin.
  • Chemistry
  • English
  • Ed. Psychology
  • Film
  • French
  • Kinesiology
  • Learn. Comm.
  • Math
  • Microbiology
  • Nutrition
  • Physics
  • Poultry Science
  • Psychology
  • Secondary Ed.
  • Vet Integr. Bio. Sci.
  • Wildlife Fish. Sci.
  • Zoology
  • MISSING
  • Engineering
  • Starting F06
  • Geosciences

5
How Did CPRTM Become So Popular?
  • (1) Creation of W Courses
  • Our Faculty Senate decided that for graduation,
    there would be a writing-intensive (W)
    discipline-specific course graduation
    requirement.
  • The Core Curriculum Review Committee report
    entitled "Educational Leadership at the Beginning
    of the 21st Century" (March 28, 2000, as amended
    and approved by the Faculty Senate, May 8, 2000),
    established this requirement. The first
    writing-intensive course graduation requirement
    went into effect in the Fall 2004 catalog. The
    requirement for a second course is scheduled to
    be in place in the Fall 2006 catalog.

6
How Did CPRTM Become So Popular?
  • (2) CPR was recognized as good pedagogy
    campus-wide
  • I co-ran a CPR workshop for TAMU and local
    community college faculty, supported by TAMU
    College of Science mini-grant in Summer 2003 and
    invited everyone.
  • The Director of the TAMU Writing Center
    participated, recognized its effective pedagogy
    and gave CPR her blessing for use in W courses.
  • By Fall 2003, we had CPRTM on our server, TAMU
    had quit using SSN as SIDs and we were set to go.

7
How Did CPRTM Become So Popular?
  • (3) Continued Support for our TAMU users
  • A good website cpr.tamu.edu with extended FAQs
  • Regular workshops supported by WALS, Center for
    Teaching Excellence (CTE), Information Technology
    Services, The Writing Center, and the Office of
    the Vice-President for Information Technology
  • A local users group which has started to meet
    regularly
  • 2 months summer salary for the TAMU CPR master
    administrator two other administrators are paid
    through their position at CTE
  • Access to the actual program to solve problems

WALS Writing for Assessment and Learning in
the Natural and Mathematical Sciences (the
UCLA/TAMU NSF project)
8
What are the issues?
  • TAMU has its own CPR webpage, so students
    occasionally log on to the wrong one.
  • TAMU is disconnected from the UCLA server, so we
    dont have access to the library assignments.
    This will be changing under the upgraded system.
  • Note We have found that there is more student
    buy-in when instructors write their own
    assignments
  • The assignments reflect the instructors wording
    and tone
  • CPR fits into the course flow better
  • The instructor is much more familiar with the
    program after they write assignments.

9
So what happened to CPR in Chemistry?
  • In Fall 2002 and Spring 2003, we incorporated CPR
    in all the Chemistry 101/102 classes
  • 2600 students per semester
  • Individual instructors (besides myself) had
    minimal training in CPR and were not involved
  • Assignments were taken directly from the library
  • 4 assignments, dropping 1 to allow for absences
  • I and a staff member managed the problems list,
    all the grades, and student questions
  • So what do you think was the outcome? I kept
    track using SALG.

10
Student Assessment of Learning Gainswww.wcer.wisc
.edu/salgains/instructor/
11
First Years Results from My Class
This was not good Everyone but me stopped doing
CPR. I knew that scientific writing/critiquing
were invaluable skills, so I kept trying new
approaches to improve student attitude.
12
Overview of Study (manuscript in preparation)
  • I collected SALG data for 7 semesters from my
    students (1515 total 94-98 of classes
    participated), as I continued to make CPR more
    palatable
  • Likert scale (1strongly disagree.5strongly
    agree)
  • I enjoyed doing the CPR assignments
  • The CPR assignments helped me learn some
    chemistry
  • The CPR assignments helped me improve my writing
    skills
  • The CPR assignments helped me learn to critique
    my own writing and that of others
  • Yes/No explanation
  • Do you think that future classes should do CPR?
  • I had both quantitative and qualitative data for
    analysis

13
Improvements Made Over Time
  • Prepared more thorough instructions and a
    supportive website
  • Wrote most of my own assignments
  • Became more proactive at listening to students
    adjusting grades when appropriate
  • Told my students upfront in the syllabus that the
    class was a writing-intensive class and included
    my teaching philosophy
  • Gave a CPR lab holiday since I did 7 labs
    rather than 10
  • Invited students to let me review their essays
    before submission
  • Increased importance of the text entry from 20
    to 30
  • Increased CPRs worth from 3-5 to 12 of class
    grade
  • Took classroom time to demonstrate CPR
  • Used Blooms Taxonomy to show importance of
    critiquing

14
Why is writing important?
Evaluation
Judgment the ability to make decisions and
support views requires understanding of values
Combination of information to form a
unique product requires creativity and
originality
Synthesis
Identification of component parts determination
of arrangement, logic, semantics
Analysis
Use of information to solve problems transfer of
abstract or theoretical ideas to practical
situations.
Application
Identification of connections and relationships
Interpretation
Restatement in your own words paraphrase summary
Translation
Verbatim information memorization with no
evidence of understanding
Recall
Blooms Taxonomy categorizing level of
abstraction of questions
15
Improvements Made Over Time
  • Prepared more thorough instructions and a
    supportive website
  • Wrote most of my own assignments
  • Became more proactive adjusted grades when
    appropriate
  • Told my students upfront in the syllabus that the
    class was a writing-intensive class and included
    my teaching philosophy
  • Gave a CPR lab holiday since my class did 7
    labs, not 10
  • Invited students to let me review their essays
    before submission
  • Increased importance of the text entry from 20
    to 30
  • Increased CPRs worth from 5 to 12 of class
    grade
  • Related that CPR is a grade in its own right
    helps poor test-takers
  • Took classroom time to demonstrate CPR
  • Used Blooms Taxonomy to show importance of
    critiquing
  • Emphasized that most students are novice
    reviewers and that I would gladly look at
    anyones grade

16
Quantitative Results
What I saw was a significant increase in student
acceptance and understanding of CPR over time.
17
Group 1 Students with negative CPR experience,
wanted future classes to do CPR Group 2
Students with negative CPR experience, did not
want others to do CPR Group 3 Students with
positive CPR experience, wanted others to do
CPR Group 4 Students with positive CPR
experience, did not want others to do CPR
18
Qualitative Results Do you think that future
classes should do CPR? Explain.
  • Over 7 semesters, there were
  • 550 totally positive responses
  • 515 totally negative responses
  • 174 mixed responses
  • 25 neutral responses
  • Total 1264 responses
  • The qualitative part of this study gave
    invaluable insight into student attitude about
    CPR and how it changed as I made changes in
    presentation, student support and grade
    intervention.

19
Qualitative Results Negative Comments
  • On writing in a chemistry class
  • I have never viewed chemistry as being a subject
    where you write things We could take English
    to learn how to write correctly I didnt
    understand why writing a paper and grading other
    students papers had anything to do with
    chemistry.
  • On the peer review process
  • They ask you to grade the essays, but then your
    opinion of how that person did would be wrong. I
    just dont see how your opinion could be wrong.
  • Other
  • Too time consuming, waste of time, not related to
    the subject it harmed their grade was worse
    than lab their peers lacked motivation added to
    stress

20
Qualitative Results Positive Comments
  • On writing in a chemistry class
  • Calibrated Peer Reviews forces the student to
    look into the topic way more than what he or she
    would do out of a textbook. I know the CPR has
    tremendously helped me understand each topic
    better although I didnt exactly enjoy it.
  • The CPR really helped me understand the topics.
    It reinforced the material by forcing me to teach
    myself and explain it to others through writing.
    It was very helpful.
  • I think the first one is bad because you dont
    really know what youre doing and how to approach
    the whole thing, but after doing it you realize
    that you are learning the subject because you had
    to write a paragraph on it. It was a big help
    whether people will admit it or not.

21
Qualitative Results More Positive Comments
  • Overall
  • Although CPR was one of my least favorite things
    to do in this class, I think the good in it
    outweighs the bad. I think that especially in
    the science fields, students dont have to do a
    lot of writing and so they dont develop
    communication skills that they will need later on
    in life. I think communication is very important
    and it is something that you just have to work
    on. I think students will look back and wish
    they would have done more stuff like CPR.
  • It seems like a pain at the time, but I can
    already see how much I learned from it. Please
    continue to do it, it helps more than people
    realize.
  • Other positives
  • Helped link chemistry to real life and their
    professional future, developed time management
    and research skills

22
Qualitative Results Overview
23
Final Comments
  • CPR is an example of the move from
    teacher-centered learning to student-centered
    learning
  • If you add writing, peer review and technology to
    the mix, should I have been surprised at the
    level of student angst?
  • Students have a more positive experience when the
    instructor
  • actively promotes demonstrates CPR in the
    classroom,
  • makes the assignments a significant part of
    grade,
  • is involved in writing assignments,
  • gives personalized support
  • regrades when warranted

24
Thanks to my co-authors Dr. Nancy
Simpson, Director, Center for Teaching
Excellence Ms. A. Baris Gunersel, Ph.D.
Student, Educational Psychology Graduate
Research Assistant Center for Teaching
Excellence
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