Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.
Comment: Import Macro Repair
Excerpt

How to set up your gradebook with categories that are specific to your discipline.  For example, language classes might use: speaking, listening, reading and writing.


Expand
titleContents...

Table of Contents

A longer summary can go here


The steps below demonstrate structuring a class gradebook around category names of your choice so that a class total is correctly calculated for each student.

We have used an example class in the steps below with an assessment regime as follows:

  • Speaking (15%), Listening (15%), Reading (35%), Writing (35%).
  • Speaking is made up of a presentation (10%) and an exam (5%)
  • Listening is made of a piece of coursework (5%) and an exam (10%)
  • Reading is made up of three pieces of coursework all of equal weight
  • Writing is a single exam


Step 1 - Create your categories



Click on the images to enlarge them

1) Go to the Gradebook

From the Administration block on the left, select Gradebook setup.

Check whether you have a Summative category. 


2) Create a Summative category if you don't have one

If you have a Summative category, you can skip this bit.




To create a Summative category, click 'Add a category' at the bottom of your gradebook.


Name the category Summative.

Select aggregation method 'Weighted mean of grades'.

Ignore the other settings and click 'Save changes'.


3) Create your own categories

Create your own categories.  For our example class above, this will be: speaking, listening, reading and writing.

Click 'Add category'.


Give the category a name (for our example class, this will be 'Speaking').

Select the aggregation method 'Weighted mean of grades'.

Click the triangle next to the Parent category heading to expand the section.

Set the Parent category to Summative.

Then click 'Save changes'.


Repeat the process for each category you wish to create.



Click the 'Save changes' button at the bottom of your gradebook to ensure your new categories are saved.


Step 2 - Organise your categories as you want them to appear


Our example class will now look like the image on the right.


If you wish to move the order in which your categories appear, click the up and down arrow next to its name and then select its new position.

Image RemovedImage Added


Click the 'Save changes' button at the bottom of your gradebook to ensure your new categories are saved.


Step 3 - Weight your categories


In the box next to the Summative category, enter 100 (see the blue box on the right).  Ensure that any other categories outside the Summative category are weighted 0.In the box next to each category you have created, enter the weight that it contributes to the class total.  In our example class, the speaking and listening categories are each worth 15% of the class total, and the reading and writing categories are each worth 30% 35% of the class total.


Image RemovedImage Added


Click the 'Save changes' button at the bottom of your gradebook to ensure your new categories are saved.


Step 4 - Move your activities into the correct categories


Click the box on the far right of each assessment item you would like to move to your first category.  For our example class, we will start with the Reading category.


Use the 'Move selected items to' dropdown list to select the category into which you would like to move them.


The items will then appear in the category you have chosen.


Repeat this for the activities for each category.


Click the 'Save changes' button at the bottom of your gradebook to ensure your new categories are saved.


Step 5 - Weight the assessment items


The weighting for assessment items is done in exactly the same way as the weighting for categories.


In the box next to each category you have createditem, enter the weight that it contributes to the class total.


IMAGEImage Added


If you wish all activities within a category to contribute exactly the same weight towards the class total and this cannot easily be done with weighting - as with the activities in the Reading category of our example class - you can set the category's aggregation method to 'Mean of grades'.


To the right of the category's name, click Edit and select 'Edit settings'.


Select Mean of grades and then click 'Save changes'.


Our example class would now look like the image on the right.


Click the 'Save changes' button at the bottom of your gradebook to ensure your new categories are saved.


Your gradebook is now complete.



Related Articles

Filter by label (Content by label)
sortmodified
reversetrue
typepage
cqllabel = "myplace2016" and type = "page"
labelsmyplace2016