Skills-Based Grading: a novel approach to teaching formal semantics: Linguistic Society of America 2021

M. O'Leary, R. Stockwell

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

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Abstract

This paper reports an implementation of ‘Skills-Based Grading’ (SBG) in a formal semantics course. In traditional grading, every part of every assignment contributes to the final grade. Students are required to progress along a uniform timeline, with partial credit as a safety net. In SBG, by contrast, the course is composed of skills. Students are given multiple opportunities to demonstrate mastery in each skill, but full proficiency is required to gain credit. Zuraw et al. (2019) pioneered the use of SBG in linguistics for phonetics and phonology. SBG is known to work well for skills that require algorithmic approaches to arrive at inarguably correct answers. In applying SBG to semantics, we show that it is just as effective for more abstract and philosophical skills. Based on survey and grade data, we substantiate claims that SBG improves student learning, encourages more effective study, lowers student stress, and achieves more equitable outcomes. Since this paper reports our first use of SBG, we conclude with some reflections on improvements for the future.
Original languageEnglish
Pages869-881
Number of pages13
DOIs
Publication statusPublished (in print/issue) - 20 Mar 2021

Keywords

  • Skills-Based Grading
  • semantics
  • pedagogy

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