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ASSESSMENT

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Title: ASSESSMENT


1
ASSESSMENT ANALYSIS
  • 5

2
Types of Methodologies
  • Introduction
  • Needs assessment
  • Analysis criteria
  • Rapid analysis method
  • Analysis tools

3
Introduction
  • Assessment
  • An evaluation.
  • The act or result of judging the worth or value
    of something or someone.
  • Analysis
  • The separation of an intellectual or material
    whole into its constituent parts for individual
    study.
  • The examination and evaluation of the relevant
    information to select the best course of action
    from among various alternatives.

4
Assessment
  • Do we need assessment?

5
Needs Assessment
  • Determine if an instructional need exist by
    conducting a needs assessment using some
    combination of methods and techniques.
  • Provides an outline of the information that needs
    to be found and the means of collecting the
    information.
  • Based on interviews, surveys and group meetings
    to get the opinions and feelings of the people
    involved.

6
Needs Assessment
  • Involves as many concerned parties as possible or
    necessary to make sure you get the information
    you need and how confident you are with it.
  • Conducted in stages based upon what you've
    already learned.
  • Tools extant data analysis, job descriptions,
    customer studies, etc.

7
What to be analyzed?
  • Front-end analysis
  • Audience analysis
  • Situational analysis
  • Task analysis
  • Critical incident analysis
  • Objective analysis
  • Extant data analysis
  • Cost analysis

8
Front-End Analysis
  • It is the first step in the multimedia
    development process.
  • FEA - An analysis that is performed in order to
    gather crucial information which will be used to
    develop technically sound instruction.
  • FEA consists of goal analysis, performance
    analysis, target population, learning environment
    analysis, instructional strategy.

9
Front-End Analysis
  • Goal Analysis
  • This technique is used to analyze a goal to
    identify the sequence of operations and decisions
    required to achieve it.
  • Performance Analysis
  • A systematic process for determining goals,
    identifying discrepancies between optimal and
    actual performance, and establishing priorities
    for action.

10
Front-End Analysis
  • Target Population
  • A description of those whom the instruction is
    intended (the learners).
  • Knowing the audience will greatly aid in training
    development.
  • Learning Environment Analysis
  • A description of the environment where the
    learning will take place. Knowing the environment
    will greatly aid in training development.

11
Front-End Analysis
  • Instructional Strategy
  • An instructional strategy is a combination of
    technique, media (or delivery method), and
    location which shapes the instruction.

12
Audience Analysis
  • The audience is often referred to as the end
    user, and all communications need to be targeted
    towards the defined audience.
  • When defining an audience, factors that must be
    considered include
  • Age, education, job function, skills, language,
    culture, background knowledge, training, needs
    and interest.

13
Audience Analysis
  • A nalysis - Who are they? How many will be there?
  • U nderstanding - What is their knowledge of the
    subject?
  • D emographics - What is their age, sex,
    educational background?
  • I nterest - Why are they there? Who asked them to
    be there?
  • E nvironment - Where will I stand? Can they all
    see hear me?
  • N eeds - What are their needs? What are your
    needs as the speaker?
  • C ustomized - What specific needs do you need to
    address?
  • E xpectations - What do they expect to learn or
    hear from you?

  • by Laskowski (1996)

14
Technology Analysis
  • Analysis on the technology to be applied or
    implemented while authoring the learning
    application, or when user uses the learning tool.
  • Example
  • Design technology 3D animation, flash, types of
    authoring tools, etc.
  • In the learning tool speaker, online conference,
    online tutoring, online discussion, etc.

15
Situational Analysis
  • To identify and prioritize problem situations
    effecting the target population or specific
    segments of the population.
  • Answer several questions
  • Students characteristics
  • Background, etc.

16
Task Analysis
  • A Learning Task Analysis consists of selecting
    the instructional goal(s), conducting an
    information processing analysis, and writing
    educational objectives.
  • Analyze the learning outcomes and performances
    objectives by identifying the domains and levels
    of learning and determining prerequisite skills
    and task/content structure.

17
Example of Task Analysis
18
Critical Incident Analysis
  • The Critical Incident Technique (or CIT) is a set
    of procedures used for collecting direct
    observations of human behavior that have critical
    significance and meet methodically defined
    criteria.
  • These observations are then kept track of as
    incidents, which are then used to solve practical
    problems and develop broad psychological
    principles.

19
Critical Incident Analysis
  • A critical incident can be described as one that
    makes a significant contribution - either
    positively or negatively - to an activity or
    phenomenon.
  • Critical incidents can be gathered in various
    ways, but typically respondents are asked to tell
    a story about an experience they have had.

20
Critical Incident Analysis
  • CIT is a flexible method that usually relies on
    five major areas.
  • The first is determining and reviewing the
    incident, then fact-finding, which involves
    collecting the details of the incident from the
    participants.
  • When all of the facts are collected, the next
    step is to identify the issues.

21
Critical Incident Analysis
  • Afterwards a decision can be made on how to
    resolve the issues based on various possible
    solutions.
  • The final and most important aspect is the
    evaluation, which will determine if the solution
    that was selected will solve the root cause of
    the situation and will cause no further problems.

22
Critical Incident Analysis
  • The user is asked to focus on one or more
    critical incidents which they experienced
    personally in the field of activity being
    analyzed.
  • CIT analysis uses a method known as Content
    Analysis in order to summarize the experiences of
    many users or many experiences of the same user.

23
How do we do the CIT?
  • You can do CIT by either employing an interview
    or by getting the users to fill out a paper form.
  • The user is requested to follow the three stages
    described below in that order
  • focus on an incident which had a strong positive
    influence on the result of the interaction and
    describe the incident
  • describe what led up to the incident
  • describe how the incident helped the successful
    completion of the interaction.

24
Reporting Critical Incident Analysis
  • For a summative evaluation, you should collect
    enough critical incidents which will enable you
    to make statements such as "x percent of the
    users found feature y in context z was helpful/
    unhelpful."
  • For a formative evaluation, you should collect
    enough contextual data around each incident so
    that the designers can place the critical
    incidents in scenarios or use cases.

25
Objective Analysis
  • A learning objective answers the question What
    is it that your student should be able to do at
    the end of learning period?
  • A learning objective makes clear the intended
    learning outcome or product of instruction,
    rather than what form the instruction will take.

26
Objective Analysis
  • Focus on student performance.
  • Action verbs that are specific list, describe,
    report, compare, demonstrate, and analyze should
    state the behaviors students will be expected to
    perform.

27
Extant Data Analysis
  • Front end analysis to determine the effects of
    student performance by looking at the outcomes
    and inferring the actual performance or
    performance problem that is taking place.
  • Purposes of EDA
  • To seek the truth, gain a better understanding of
    performance and verify information, through the
    outcomes without relying on opinions from those
    involved.

28
Extant Data Analysis
  • Use the results as the basis for later stages of
    TNA.
  • Make sure that the accomplishments match the
    goals of the learning.
  • Look at data that will measure performance
  • Figures, Statistics, Records, Files, etc.

29
Extant Data Analysis
  • EDA tools
  • Grade and exam results
  • Entry test
  • Performance review
  • Personnel records

30
Cost Analysis
  • Cost analysis (also called economic evaluation,
    cost allocation, efficiency assessment,
    cost-benefit analysis, or cost-effectiveness
    analysis by different authors) is currently a
    somewhat controversial set of methods in program
    evaluation.
  • One reason for the controversy is that these
    terms cover a wide range of methods, but are
    often used interchangeably.

31
Rapid Analysis Method - Intro
  • People must be lined up and their views sought. 
  • Ideas need to be sorted through. 
  • Data needs to be collected, stored, retrieved,
    examined and displayed. 
  • Reports needs to be prepared. 
  • Policymakers may have to decide without the full
    benefit of the analysis

32
Rapid Analysis Method
  • Objectives
  • How analysis could be made faster without
    sacrificing its quality.
  • An examination of what takes time in the analysis
    process.
  • Where one can speed up the work without affecting
    the quality of the report.

33
Rapid Analysis Method
  • Preparation
  • Data collection
  • Analyze data
  • Presentation
  • Additional note

34
Analysis tools
  • Brainstorm
  • SWOT
  • Discussion
  • Survey

35
Brainstorm
  • A sudden clever plan or idea.
  • To consider or investigate (an issue, for
    example) by brainstorming.
  • To think of or produce (a solution to a problem,
    for example) by brainstorming.

36
Brainstorm
  • Brainstorming with a group of people is a
    powerful technique.
  • Brainstorming creates new ideas, solves problems,
    motivates and develops teams.
  • Brainstorming motivates because it involves
    members of a team in bigger management issues,
    and it gets a team working together.

37
Brainstorming Process
  • Define and agree the objective.
  • Brainstorm ideas and suggestions having agreed a
    time limit.
  • Categorize/condense/combine/refine.
  • Assess/analyze effects or results.
  • Prioritize options/rank list as appropriate.
  • Agree action and timescale.
  • Control and monitor follow-up.

38
SWOT
  • Strength,
  • Weaknesses,
  • Opportunities,
  • Threats
  • After the issue has been defined and the
    environmental influences have been identified you
    can develop a summary of internal strengths and
    weaknesses of the organization managing the
    project and the external opportunities and
    threats that could affect the campaign.

39
SWOT
  • Internal strengths and weaknesses are things like
    human and financial resources, expertise,
    management support and internal politics.
  • External opportunities or threats include
    cultural norms, demographics, economic situation,
    political or legal issues and the activities of
    external organizations.

40
Discuss
  • To speak together and exchange ideas and opinions
    about something.
  • Discussion within group members on the process of
    developing a project.
  • Individual task, dateline, materials, etc.

41
Survey
  • To examine or look at comprehensively.
  • To inspect carefully
  • To inspect and determine the structural condition
    of (a building).
  • To conduct a statistical survey on.

42
Survey
  • A sample survey studies part of a group (the
    sample) in order  to make inferences about the
    whole group (the population) from which the
    sample is drawn. 

43
Example (survey)
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