Quick Tip: End of Semester Planning

The following are a few ideas adapted from the SUNY Teaching and Learning center, that may help you prepare for the Spring semester, and/or update your teaching portfolio:

Keep a copy of your syllabus and each assignment you design

Your teaching portfolio may include a range of syllabi and assignments you’ve designed. Make sure you keep a copy of syllabi, assignments, and assessments so that you have as many options as possible to choose from for your teaching portfolio. As the semester ends, you might make small notes about the genesis of a certain syllabus theme or assessment. These brief notes may prove useful later when you are asked to talk about your approach to teaching or ways you have developed as an instructor.

Is there an article?

Think about the larger impact of practices from your courses this semester. Did you try something new: a new assignment? A new classroom design? Reflect on your pedagogical practices and what new learning experiences they opened up. Is there something you want to write about and share with other instructors?

There are several journals geared toward articles about pedagogical practices, including the International Journal of Designs for Learning https://scholarworks.iu.edu/journals/index.php/ijdl/index

Think about revision

It’s possible that you might teach this course again or a course in which you’ll use similar activities or assignments. Even if you don’t think you’ll teach this course in the next semester, take a few minutes to think about what you want to keep, what you want to revise and keep, and what you want to toss totally when you teach the course again.

If you annotated your syllabus throughout the semester, then read through those notes and make a ‘to do’ list or a quick summary of them so that, when you return to planning, you have some guidelines for how to jump back in.

If you didn’t annotate your syllabus, take a few minutes to jot down a few notes about what readings, assignments, and so forth that you absolutely want to keep, or what new ideas you have that you want to try next time. Think about the feedback you received from students through both formal and informal evaluations. How can you incorporate this feedback into your next class?

A small pocket of time at the end of the semester can help you get ahead for the next semester.

Record of grades & attendance

Students may come to you a semester, a year, or even a couple of years after you’ve had them in your class. You’ll likely have engaged with dozens or hundreds of students since then, and the records you keep will be helpful in refreshing your memory.

Consider keeping any of the following that are not stored in Canvas:

  • any unreturned papers (such as final exams, final papers, etc)

  • your attendance records

  • course syllabus, grading policy documents, and all rubrics and assignments

  • student emails (you don’t need to print them, but perhaps keep them in a mailbox folder)

Sample Papers and Standout Examples

You might want to keep a few papers on hand as examples to share with a class or models that you can work through, critique or peer review with future students. Make sure you get each student’s permission and preference for name/no name on the paper. You might consider sending out an announcement or including on your syllabus that all work that is submitted can be used anonymously for “future educational purposes,” and asking that students who wish to be excluded from this policy email you. Additionally, if there are standout examples you might want to keep them for your teaching portfolio.

As always, please let me know if I can support you in any of the efforts mentioned above.

Exam Debrief

Dawn M. Wiggins, a faculty member in the Mathematics Department at Illinois Valley Community College, argues that exam debriefs can help students see how self-defeating behaviors can negatively affect their results on an exam.  However, the debrief she describes (including the questions she asked (see: https://oncourseworkshop.com/self-awareness/exam-debrief/)) goes beyond providing students with the correct answer on the test.

Why use an exam debrief?

Favero & Hendricks, H. (2016) explain that exam debriefs offer faculty the opportunity to confront study strategy issues as well as garner an understanding of misconceptions students may hold about the content. Wiggins shares, “I think there is a window of opportunity immediately following an exam to help students identify the things they did to prepare for the exam and the things that they could do better the next time”.  Further, exam debriefs offer students the opportunity to think critically about their experience on the exam, as well as gain a better understanding of their learning process.

What is the process for debriefing an exam?

Weimer (2018) has summarized Favero & Hendricks he exam debriefing (ED) process:

Part 1: Students looked carefully at the questions they missed and tried to determine why each question was missed. 
Part 2: Students then examined the questions to see if there was a pattern emerging. Did they miss questions for the same reason?
Part 3: Students prepared a brief description of how they studied for the exam, including the amount of time devoted to studying.
Part 4: Based on the information gleaned so far, students identified what changes they thought they could make that might help them better prepare for the next exam. They were given a list of areas where changes could be made:

  • time on task, 

    1. attending to detail, 

    2. using active learning strategies, and 

    3. general study habits. 

  • (Examples were given in each of these areas; see additional questions in the example linked above).

In the ED process students selected the behavior changes they believed they needed to make. All selected options from the active learning category in part, the authors believe, because those activities were demonstrated, modeled, and used in class. For example, many students reported using flashcards but only as devices that helped them memorize details like definitions. In class, Favero used an activity with flashcards in their human anatomy course that showed students how flashcards can be used more fruitfully to show relationships between, in this case, anatomical structure and function.

Suggestions from implementing an exam debrief (from McGill University)

  • Include a debrief questionnaire on the last page of the exam.

  • Distribute a debrief questionnaire when corrected exams are returned.

  • Allow class time to fill out a debrief questionnaire.

  • Make the debrief questionnaire an online assignment.

Additional Resources: