Skip to main content

Lund University Publications

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Student-oriented Examination in a Computer Architecture Course

Larsson, Erik LU orcid and Larsson, Anders (2004) 9th Annual Conference on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education p.245-245
Abstract
Learning is a highly individual process. Some prefer learning by reading the course material, others learn best by listening to a lecture, whilesome like to learn in a trial-and-error way by themselves in a laboratory assignment. A good learning scheme is individual. A scheme that is good for some persons might not at all be good scheme for someone else. It is important to understand your own personal way to learn, but also when organizing a course individual learning alternatives should be acknowledged.Examination in a course can be seen as a test occasion or as a learning occasion. Traditionally, examination has been an occasion where knowledge is tested. Written exams can be used to test the theory and laboratory work to test practical... (More)
Learning is a highly individual process. Some prefer learning by reading the course material, others learn best by listening to a lecture, whilesome like to learn in a trial-and-error way by themselves in a laboratory assignment. A good learning scheme is individual. A scheme that is good for some persons might not at all be good scheme for someone else. It is important to understand your own personal way to learn, but also when organizing a course individual learning alternatives should be acknowledged.Examination in a course can be seen as a test occasion or as a learning occasion. Traditionally, examination has been an occasion where knowledge is tested. Written exams can be used to test the theory and laboratory work to test practical aspects of the course material. For laboratory work the distinction between learning and test of learning is somewhat unclear. The learning and the test of learning are mixed. However, in general, examination can be seen as an occasion to learn and/or to test knowledge. We have, in a Computer Architecture course, taken the view that (1) learning is an individual process, and (2) that examination is a learning occasion. The consequence of our view (1)+(2) is basically that examination should be individual, or student-oriented. Alternatives to traditional examination is also supported when taking gender, cultural, and age perspectives. We therefore developed two examination tracks where the students in the beginning of the course decided what track to follow. Common for both tracks is that credits are given that can be counted for in the written exam (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
and
publishing date
type
Contribution to conference
publication status
published
subject
keywords
learning, teaching in computer science, examination
categories
Higher Education
pages
245 - 245
conference name
9th Annual Conference on Innovation and Technology in Computer Science Education
conference dates
0001-01-02
language
English
LU publication?
no
id
8c9b0b2c-8eda-4212-8af1-59c3362532d6 (old id 2341161)
alternative location
http://www.ida.liu.se/labs/eslab/publications/pap/db/ITCSE04.pdf
date added to LUP
2016-04-04 14:21:36
date last changed
2018-11-21 21:19:51
@misc{8c9b0b2c-8eda-4212-8af1-59c3362532d6,
  abstract     = {{Learning is a highly individual process. Some prefer learning by reading the course material, others learn best by listening to a lecture, whilesome like to learn in a trial-and-error way by themselves in a laboratory assignment. A good learning scheme is individual. A scheme that is good for some persons might not at all be good scheme for someone else. It is important to understand your own personal way to learn, but also when organizing a course individual learning alternatives should be acknowledged.Examination in a course can be seen as a test occasion or as a learning occasion. Traditionally, examination has been an occasion where knowledge is tested. Written exams can be used to test the theory and laboratory work to test practical aspects of the course material. For laboratory work the distinction between learning and test of learning is somewhat unclear. The learning and the test of learning are mixed. However, in general, examination can be seen as an occasion to learn and/or to test knowledge. We have, in a Computer Architecture course, taken the view that (1) learning is an individual process, and (2) that examination is a learning occasion. The consequence of our view (1)+(2) is basically that examination should be individual, or student-oriented. Alternatives to traditional examination is also supported when taking gender, cultural, and age perspectives. We therefore developed two examination tracks where the students in the beginning of the course decided what track to follow. Common for both tracks is that credits are given that can be counted for in the written exam}},
  author       = {{Larsson, Erik and Larsson, Anders}},
  keywords     = {{learning; teaching in computer science; examination}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{245--245}},
  title        = {{Student-oriented Examination in a Computer Architecture Course}},
  url          = {{http://www.ida.liu.se/labs/eslab/publications/pap/db/ITCSE04.pdf}},
  year         = {{2004}},
}