I was eager to hand my first batch of graded lab reports back to the students, and I was interested to see how they would react. As is the custom of the class, I handed the papers back at the beginning of the period. This may not be the best method. There was a sense of frustration in the class and we hadn't even started class yet. Most of the students did well; the bell curve was toward the higher B, low A range. But, not all of the students performed as they expected.
The next time we have papers to hand back, I think I will wait until the end of class. Even if the students did well and their grades met their expectation, there's an element of distraction where the students are eager to review and compare results.
I may have found an even better way. Despite being graded and recorded, the assignment still has instructional value.
Even though I added comments to their papers, there may be an even greater benefit to explaining answers in class once the papers are handed back.
There is a lot of instruction that happens before and during the lab, but simply because the papers are turned in and the students can't update their answers doesn't mean that the assignment has no further instructional value. Sometimes that "Aha!" moment comes after a failure; it is often here that the student is ready to learn.
For next time, here's the plan:
- Low-Point Assignments - Hand back at the end of the period and be available for questions.
- Mid- to High-Point Assignment - Make the time in my next lesson plan to spend a few minutes reviewing questions, especially the ones that were commonly missed.
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