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Digital writing [[electronic resource] ] : assessment and evaluation



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Autore: Heidi A. McKee Visualizza persona
Titolo: Digital writing [[electronic resource] ] : assessment and evaluation Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Utah State University Press/ Computers and Composition Digital Press, 2012
Logan, Utah : , : Computers and Composition Digital Press, , 2013
©2013
Descrizione fisica: 1 online resource : digital, HTML file(s)
Soggetto topico: English language - Rhetoric - Computer-assisted instruction
Literature - General
Languages & Literatures
Soggetto non controllato: evaluation
assessment
digital writing
Persona (resp. second.): McKeeHeidi A.
DeVossDànielle Nicole
Note generali: Bibliographic Level Mode of Issuance: Monograph
Nota di bibliografia: Includes bibliographical references.
Nota di contenuto: Foreword --Preface --Part I: equity and assessment --Part II: classroom evaluation and assessment --Part III: multimodal evaluation and assessment --Part IV: program revisioning and program assessment --Afterword.
Sommario/riassunto: Writing has changed due to the affordances of digital technologies, and writing assessment has changed as well. As writing programs integrate more digital writing work, students, teachers, and administrators face the rewards and challenges of assessing and evaluating multimodal and networked writing projects. Whether classroom-based or program-level; whether in first-year writing, technical communication, or writing-across-the-curriculum; whether formative or summative; and whether for purposes of placement, grading, self-study, or external reporting, digital writing complicates the processes and practices of assessment. The chapters in Digital Writing Assessment & Evaluation place emphasis on assessment of digital writing—the methodological, technological, and ethical approaches for and issues involved with assessing multimodal, networked texts (and the student learning they represent). Authors address questions such as: How do different approaches to assessing traditional writing (8 1/2 x 11 word-centric texts) port—or not—to the assessment of digital writing? What challenges and opportunities for assessment do multimodal, networked texts present to teachers, program administrators, state-wide organizations, etc.? What material and technological resources are needed when assessing digital writing and/or how might existing resources need to be modified? How are processes and products of selection, collection, and reflection different (or not) with the multimodal affordances of digital technologies? How do guidelines and outcomes of groups such as CCCC, NCTE, WPA, AAC&U, impact approaches to assessment? How might these guidelines and outcomes need to be revised to better address digital writing assessment? How might the multimodal, networked affordances of digital writing affect issues of equity and access? How might groups often disenfranchised by more traditional assessment be impacted by digital writing assessment? How might eportfolios be designed for showcasing the collaborative composing processes of multimodal and/or networked writing? By what criteria should program administrators and instructors assess and select course-management and/or eportfolio systems? The fourteen chapters are organized into four sections, addressing equity and assessment, classroom evaluation and assessment, multimodal evaluation and assessment, and program revisioning and program assessment. Andrea Lunsford provides the foreword to the book; Edward White is the author of the afterword.
Altri titoli varianti: Digital writing : assessment and evaluation
Titolo autorizzato: Digital writing  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910140296203321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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