Friday, 14 June 2013

What is the approach


Task one

·         The course I am teaching in is Automotive engineering Level 3, and we are in the business of training people to enter in to the automotive industry in any sector (heavy diesel, sales, parts, light car repairs and servicing etc.)  Our course will take approx.. 1/3 out of an apprenticeship for the student and put them into the workplace in a work ready state that so they can be productive for their employer on the very first day.

·         The assessment I am working on for this section is, Unit 21674; Demonstrate knowledge of terminology used in the motor industry.

·         It has been generated for people entering the automotive industry to gain knowledge in the terms and definitions used by people that work in it. The catch with this particular unit is that terms do vary greatly depending on what country you are in. This is an ongoing unit as the more the student learns the more terms they are going to find. But we deliver this part of the course early on to help with the other parts.

·         This fits into all sectors of the automotive industry as a compulsory unit at level 2 for any automotive apprentice. This unit is also a must by employer’s standards that they need to be able to talk the lingo.

·         The assessment approach is an informal/summative style, in which the students are given a lesson on the requirements and booklet to complete over a given time period.

·         In the assessment class they are able to give answers individually or consult within the group if needed. Each group will be given a word or a term starting with each letter of the alphabet.
 
 

References;



Otago Polytechnic “Terminology in the Motor Industry” 2013

3 comments:

  1. Hamish this sounds like a useful assessment for learning about the terminology. I look forward to hearing later on how it works.

    It is not quite clear here what the students are doing with the workbook. When we talked you said they had to look for information about the terms (x 64) that you provide, and write their own definitions for the terms. Is that right? So they can get feedback on these definitions as they put them together? (Formative feedback.) Then when the workbook is completed they hand it in for marking (Summative assessment.)

    Is the informal part of the assessment the fact that:
    i. the students can work on the workbook in their own time as they study the unit standard? ii. it is an 'open book' assessment?

    If you could clarify my questions on here that would be great. Then the information can be included in Task 3.

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  2. HI Bronwyn,
    Yes the students can work on the workbook in the own time and work together on the answers, if they do not know the meanings to the terms in the booklet then they are able to look them up with the resources provided.
    After the workbook has been completed and marked then they have a assessment class were they are tested on a range of terms to cover the elements of the unit standard.
    Cheers
    Hamish

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  3. Thanks for the clarification Hamish.

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