3rd TALOE Newsletter is now available

The newsletter gives further information about the considerable progress reached by the partnership since the publication of the second newsletter in March.

The web-based e-assessment platform was finalised and available to the public.  Demonstrations and presentations of the tool and the used assessment model took place in several international conferences including the IACEE 2015 workshop on online learning in Beijing, China, the 47th EUCEN Conference in Istanbul, the EDEN Annual Conference in Barcelona and the EUNIS Elearning Task Force Workshop in Dundee.

The successfull TALOE webinar series will continue during the fall as well with the new webinar titled “Mind the Gap! Perceptual differences and learning” scheduled on 16 September 2015, starting at 11:00AM CET. The lecturer will be Steve Wheeler, associate professor of Learning Technology in Plymouth Institute of Education, Plymouth University.

The newsletter is circulated via the partnership’s mailing lists of their members and stakeholders, and social networks.

Recording of TALOE webinar “Composing assessment for the multimodal classroom” is now available

The TALOE consortium hold another successful webinar on 15 June about about the increasing possibility of taking a multimodal approach in the construction of academic knowledge due to the growing digital influence within higher education. The presenter was James Lamb, Assistant Director of Lothians Equal Access Programme for Schools (LEAPS), in Edinburgh.

The recording is available here, and the previous webinars of the series are available here.

This month’s TALOE webinar: Composing assessment for the multimodal classroom

The fifth lecture of the TALOE webinar series “Talks on E-assessment and Learning Outcomes” is to be held on 15 June 2015, starting at 11:00AM CEST with the title of “Composing assessment for the multimodal classroom” by James Lamb, Assistant Director of Lothians Equal Access Programme for Schools (LEAPS), in Edinburgh.

A wander through the corridors of the university reminds us that academic knowledge can be constructed differently across the disciplines. As we peer into seminar rooms, studios and performance spaces we will see students displaying their ability through words, images and sounds respectively. However the growing digital influence within higher education means it becomes increasingly possible to take a multimodal approach in the construction of academic knowledge. For instance, a student faced with a conventional essay question might respond by creating a video where she represents her ideas through a simultaneous juxtaposition of photographs, text captions and a musical soundtrack.

The lecturer will argue in the session that the increasingly digital nature of teaching and learning in higher education calls us for to fully consider the possibilities of multimodal assessment and feedback. He will begin with a short presentation where he contextualise the subject though reference to multimodal literature (particularly drawing on the work of Carey Jewitt and Gunther Kress) before posing questions for discussion. He will conclude the session by briefly describing two examples of multimodal assessment and feedback in practice.

To login into the webinar click on https://connect.srce.hr/taloe_webinars/
No previous registration is needed, but you can indicate your interest, comment the topic and put questions to the presenters in advance here. The recording of the previous webinars of the series are also freely available. (1st webinar, 2nd webinar, 3rd webinar, 4th webinar)

Recording of TALOE webinar “A journey through the assessment and feedback landscape: from principles to effective practice” is now available

The TALOE consortium hold another successful webinar on 20 May about the outcomes of a 3 year programme of activity to enhance assessment and feedback practice in the UK. Dr. Gill Ferrell presented the programme that involved over 30 universities working directly with around 2,200 staff and more than 6000 students covering all of the main academic disciplines. She talked about the outcomes of a landscape review that gave an overview of academic practice at the beginning of the journey and identified the factors that were most effective in delivering real change. Some freely available tools were also highlighted that can be readily applied to help other universities review and enhance their own practice and an update was given on ongoing developments and opportunities for European partners to get involved with the activities.

The recording is available here, and the previous webinars of the series are available here.

Information about the next webinar is coming soon.