Using an iPod for Grading in a Web-Enhanced Class

This is just too cool for words. Cole Camplese, a professor at Penn State, has figured out a way to use his iPod to help him grade many more (short) student writing assignments very quickly. Here’s how it works:

  1. The professor assigns a short reading to the class. Every student is expected to respond with a short post to the class discussion board.
  2. The professor creates a grading rubric that simplifies the scoring of the student submission to one scoring number. (I assume the professor distributes the rubric to the class as well.)
  3. Software translates the student text postings into speech and records it as a sound file (presumably with accompanying metadata regarding who the student is and what the assignment is).
  4. The professor downloads the student posts, now in spoken form, to an iPod.
  5. Using the one-click rating feature, the professor rates each post based on the rubric.
  6. Optionally, the professor adds audio feedback using a microphone add-on to the iPod.
  7. The professor sync’s the iPod with a desktop computer, uploading the scores into some grade tracking software (and, presumably, the audio comments to some place where students can access them).

Best part of all: Camplese claims he already has a working system that does this.

(Found via Mark Oehlert’s eClippings.)

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