Module 5: Creating assignments

The learning activities that you designed around the learning resources that you selected for students to learn the course content comprise the formative assessment component of your course. In this module, we will focus on designing assignments, which are part of the summative assessment component of your course. 

Objectives

After working on this module, you should be able to:

Nature and Purpose of Assignments

Assignments, like examinations, are course activities that are designed to “sum up student achievement at a particular point in time” (Victoria Department of Education and Early Childhood Development, 2013). As a form of summative assessment, assignments require students to integrate what they have learned about a set of topics, and to demonstrate multi-domain and higher-level learning. In addition, student performance in assignments is formally evaluated and given marks or scores that are included in the computation of the student’s final grade for the course.

Assignments can be contrasted with formative learning activities and exercises that are focused on specific topics and where student performance is assessed by teachers in an informal way throughout the course. In UPOU courses, assignments and examinations comprise the key course requirements that students must fulfill in order to pass the course.

Types of Assignments

Assignments in tertiary-level or college-level courses (whether undergraduate or graduate) typically take the form of reports or research papers, case studies, critical essays, proposals, and multimedia projects such as video productions and slide presentations.

Different disciplines have their own preferred assignment types and it is expected that the assignments you set for your course result in ‘knowledge products’ that are expected of students in your discipline.

However, the following guidelines for creating assignments from the Carnegie Mellon Eberly Center cut across disciplines and should be borne in mind when planning assignments:

As an additional note on types of assignments, at UPOU assignments are also sometimes classified into 1) assignments to be marked by the faculty-in-charge, called faculty-marked assignments or FMAs; and 2) assignments to be marked by tutors, called tutor-marked assignments or TMAs. 

Writing the Assignment Guide

An assignment guide is a document that gives students detailed guidance on what an assignment requires. It specifies the assignment number and title or name, and includes the following specifications:

Submission date. It is important to clearly stipulate in the assignment guide when an assignment is due. This will help students to schedule work on the assignment vis-à-vis other course work as well as their non-course-related work.

Task. This is a clear and concise description of the learning task and the expected final output or product.

Procedures or specific guidelines. This consists of the steps that students should follow in accomplishing the assignment.

Evaluation criteria. This indicates in the form of a scoring guide or rubric how assignment submissions will be evaluated.

The assignment guide can also specify the following:

Sample Assignment Guide: Take a look at this simple study guide used in a previous offering of the course, Foundations of Distance Education. You may create a guide in various formats, as long as the key elements are provided to the students to help them prepare and create the expected output/s.

Sample Assignment Guide.pdf