Instructional Goals and Grading Practices of Graduate Students after One Semester of Teaching Experience

Charles Henderson, Emily Marshman, Alexandru Maries, Edit Yerushalmi, Chandralekha Singh

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaper

Abstract

Teaching assistants (TAs) are often responsible for grading student solutions. Since grading communicates instructors' expectations, TAs' grading decisions play a crucial role in forming students' approaches to problem solving (PS) in physics. We investigated the change in grading practices and considerations of 18 first-year graduate students participating in a TA professional development (PD) course. The TAs were asked to state their beliefs about the purpose of grading, to grade a set of specially designed student solutions, and to explain their grading decisions. We found that after one semester of teaching experience and participation in PD, TAs did not significantly change their goals for grading (i.e., a learning opportunity for both the student and the instructor) or their grading practice. In addition, TAs' grading practice frequently did not align with their goals. However, some TAs' perceptions of the level of explication required in a student solution did change. Our findings suggest that in order for PD to help TAs better coordinate their goals with appropriate grading practices, PD should focus on TAs' perception of sufficient reasoning in student solutions.
Original languageEnglish
Pages111-114
DOIs
StatePublished - 24 Apr 2015
EventPhysics Education Research Conference 2014 - Minneapolis, MN: July 30-31, 2014
Duration: 30 Jul 201431 Jul 2014

Conference

ConferencePhysics Education Research Conference 2014
Period30/07/1431/07/14

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