STEM Educators' Lecture
Each spring the CAT hosts the STEM Educators' Lecture, an interactive workshop featuring a speaker who is advancing the field of STEM pedagogy through their research and/or practice. While STEM-focused, faculty and teaching assistants from all disciplines are welcome.
STEM Educators' Lecture 2025:
Grading for Growth: Toward More Humane, Authentic, and Trustworthy Ways to Evaluate Student Work
Presented by: Dr. Robert Talbert
April 8, 2025, 2:00-5:00pm
Registration Coming Soon!
The traditional approach involving one-and-done assessment, points, partial credit, and averaging is demotivating for students, demoralizing for faculty, time-consuming, disconnected from science, and of questionable statistical validity. But it is changeable, and in fact there is no better time than now to explore alternatives that prioritize student growth and align better with how humans learn. In this talk, we will explore the history and issues of traditional grading, propose a framework for "alternative" grading practices, and see how to implement alternative grading without massive requirements of time or energy.
About Dr. Robert Talbert
He is a Professor in the Mathematics Department at Grand Valley State University in Allendale, Michigan USA. Where he teaches math classes (mostly for computer science and engineering students), keeps active with research, and participates in a large department of 40+ faculty members and hundreds of math majors in a rapidly-changing world for higher education. He is the author of Flipped Learning: A Guide for Higher Education Faculty (Stylus 2017), detailed on his Book page; and is currently working on a new book Grading For Growth with my colleague David Clark. You can read more of what David and Robert are thinking about at the Grading For Growth blog.