Relationship between Students’ Perception of a Rubric for Oral Presentations and Their Academic Characteristics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Design of the Intervention
- The composition of the teams was made by the professor in accordance with the criterion of alphabetical order on the list.
- The teams were composed of between 5 and 7 students.
- The duration of the presentation had to be between 25 and 35 min.
- On the same day as the evaluation, the teams were given a sheet with the presentation divided into parts in line with the number of participants, and the professor decided which member should present each of the parts. The aim of this was that all the members had to know the whole presentation.
- In each oral presentation, both the professor and the students who were not making the presentation had to evaluate the team using a rubric. The final mark of the oral presentation was made up 60% by the professor, 30% by the students, and 10% in the form of self-evaluation.
- Before the students were given their mark, they were asked to fill out an anonymous questionnaire on their perception of the validity of the rubric and another on their self-regulation.
2.3. Rubric
2.4. Rubric Validity Perception Questionnaire
2.5. Assessment of Academic Performance
2.6. Self-Regulation Questionnaire
3. Statistical Analysis
4. Results
4.1. Relationship between Students’ Perception of the Validity and Usefulness of the Rubric and Academic Characteristics of Students
Item | Mean (SD) |
---|---|
1. I have found it very appropriate to assess the presentations. | 4.3 (0.6) |
2. I found it very easy to use. | 4.5 (0.7) |
3. The number of items was adequate. | 4.1 (0.9) |
4. It was easy for each item to know the assessment of each group. | 4.0 (0.7) |
5. Having the rubric it is easier to prepare a presentation to get a good mark. | 4.3 (0.8) |
6. With the rubric you can evaluate more fairly. | 4.1 (0.7) |
7. The rubric has helped us to prepare the presentation. | 3.9 (1.0) |
8. The rubric includes the most important aspects of the presentation to evaluate. | 4.1 (0.7) |
9. I recommend using the rubric in future years | 4.4 (0.6) |
10. Total rating (sum of all items; maximum rating = 45). | 37.7 (4.0) |
4.2. Professor–Student Congruence of Evaluation
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Task | Date |
---|---|
Rubric training | 10 October 2019 |
Oral presentations | From 22 October 2019 to 7 November 2019 |
Completion of the questionnaire on perception of the validity of the rubric and on self-regulation | 7 November 2019 |
Publication of oral presentation marks | 10 December 2019 |
1. Basic Principles (30%) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Inadequate 0 | To Improve 1 | Appropriate 2 | Very Appropriate 3 | |
Mastery and understanding of the topic | Does not master or understand the subject | Shows a good understanding of parts of the topic, but not some of them | Shows a good understanding of parts of the topic | Expresses a complete and deep understanding of the subject |
Content planning and organization | Have not planned | Difficult to follow speech and inconsistent connections, indicating poor planning and little effort | Follows a proper general outline, even if he/she gets lost or needs to pay more attention to details | Well planned speech, links topics logically and coherently |
2. Application and exemplification (30%) | ||||
Inadequate 0 | To improve 1 | Appropriate 2 | Very appropriate 3 | |
Consistency with the theoretical model | The developed example is not consistent with the model | The example developed is consistent with the model, although various aspects are not adequately captured | The example developed is consistent with the theoretical model, although it would need to refine some specific aspect | The example developed is consistent with the theoretical model |
Model clarification and audience motivation | Selected example is confusing and does not fit the model | The example does not clarify adequately and is not motivating for the audience | The example does not clarify adequately OR is not motivating for the audience | The example is clarifying and motivating for the audience |
3. Visual support (20%) | ||||
Inadequate 0 | To improve 1 | Appropriate 2 | Very appropriate 3 | |
Number and explanation of slides | It does not meet the number and adequacy requirements in its explanation. | Uses an inappropriate number of slides, but tries to explain them | Adequate number of slides, although imprecise explanation of some of them | Adequate number of slides and relevant explanation of them |
Suitability of the slides | It incorporates slides that are not relevant to the topic, they do not facilitate the understanding or motivation of the audience. | Although most of them are related to the topic, they do not favor their understanding or the motivation of the audience | All are related to the topic and facilitate material understanding, although some are not connected with speech or suffer from amenity | All are related to the topic and connection with the discourse, facilitating the understanding of the material, and are entertaining/attention-grabbing |
Readability | Illegible, overwhelming use of colors, abuse of text and paragraphs | Handwriting readable by approximately 85% audience, excessive length in mostly slides. Inadequate color contrast | Handwriting readable for the entire audience, more than 5 lines per slide. Adequate contrast of colors | No more than 5 lines per slide, font legible for the entire audience, adequate contrast of colors |
Relevance and appropriateness of images/diagrams | Does not use or distract | According to content, although not relevant and low resolution | Relevant, consistent with content on most occasions, but little resolution | Relevant, consistent with content, and with adequate resolution |
Sequencing, animations, slide transitions | No order, excessive or no use. Animation and transition that facilitate distraction | Logical order, although animation is missing and only applies transitions on some slide, or does both improperly | Logical order, animation of unimportant points or transitions that impede attention | Animation of important points, helps focus attention on what is important and avoids being distracted |
4. Communication skills (20%) | ||||
Inadequate 0 | To improve 1 | Appropriate 2 | Very appropriate 3 | |
Volume and tone of voice | Too low to be heard by all and excessively monotonous | Loud enough to be heard around 70% of the time by everyone and/or inappropriate tone (monotonous, boring) | Loud enough to be heard by all and adequate tone of voice around 90% | Loud enough and with an appropriate tone of voice to be heard by the entire audience |
Clarity in speech | Little clarity. Often mumbles and mispronounces words | Speaks clearly 85–90% of the time and mispronounces numerous words | He speaks clearly 90–95% of the time, although he mispronounces some words | Speak clearly practically all of the time. |
Pauses and use of taglines | Doesn’t use pauses on purpose. Tagline abuse. Large number of incomplete sentences | Inadequate number of pauses –by excess or defect-, introduce some at unexpected moments or frequently use taglines (um…, ehhh…, well… etc.). Uses a lot of incomplete sentences | Uses pauses correctly but introduces some in an unexpected/inappropriate way. Uses taglines on several occasions (um…, ehhh…, good… etc.). Uses incomplete sentences more than 5% of the time | Use pauses correctly and at the end of sentences. Use complete sentences more than 95% of the time |
Posture and eye contact | Does not maintain eye contact and body posture is inadequate | Sometimes maintains an upright posture and maintains eye contact with the audience, but less than 90% of the time | Upright posture and makes eye contact with everyone, although some indicators of tension/disinterest are observed | Straight back, relaxed and confident posture, make eye contact with everyone |
5. Innovation and creativity (+0.5) | ||||
If creative and innovative elements have been incorporated, +0.5 can be added to the final grade. In the case of peer evaluation, this +0.5 will be considered if it is requested by more than 50% of the evaluations. |
Items of the Emotion and Motivation Self-Regulation Questionnaire | |
---|---|
Learning-oriented self-regulation (α = 0.84) | |
1 | This is going O.K.! … It seems that I understand it. |
2 | Calm down… “Do not hurry, do not stop” … You’ll get it. |
3 | Well… It seems that every time I do it better… I’m progressing… |
4 | How interesting! It seems to me that I understand it. |
5 | How difficult, but how interesting!… I have to understand how to do it. |
6 | This is not right… I’m going to check it step by step. |
7 | How complicated!… Well, I’ll go on… it is important to learn how to solve it. |
8 | Here was the mistake! Great! Next time I will know how to do it. |
Performance/avoidance oriented self-regulation (α = 0.77) | |
9 | This is not worth my time… Let’s try to finish it as soon as possible |
10 | This task is a complete loss of time! |
11 | What instructions so long! They only make me confused. |
12 | What a boring task! Let’s see if I finish and leave. |
13 | I’m dead tired… Well, I had to go on to pass. |
14 | I must go on… if I do not, I’ll fail. |
15 | What a mess! Well… Go on… if not you won’t pass the exam. |
16 | What a tiring task!… But I have to pass… Let’s continue. |
17 | What a stressful task! I’m doing it very bad… It’s so difficult! |
18 | This is so difficult… I am not going to be able to make it right. |
19 | I am not made for doing this. If I could, I would give it up. |
20 | I am getting nervous… I’m not able to do it. |
Academic Characteristic | Mean (SD) |
---|---|
Oral presentation mark provided by students (max 10 points) | 8.5 (0.6) |
Oral presentation mark provided by professor (max 10 points) | 8.7 (0.9) |
Final oral presentation mark (max 10 points) | 8.8 (0.7) |
Subject mark (max 10 points) | 8.2 (1.3) |
Academic record (max 10 points) | 7.7 (0.6) |
Self-regulation | Mean (SD) |
Learning oriented self-regulation (max 40 points) | 28.9 (4.5) |
Performance/avoidance oriented self-regulation (max 60 points) | 35.7 (7.4) |
Pearson’s Correlation (p-Value) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Item | Final Oral Presentation Mark | Subject Mark | Academic Record | Self-Regulation Learning | Self-Regulation Performance |
1. I have found it very appropriate to assess the presentations. | 0.01 (0.94) | −0.15 (0.16) | −0.28 (0.01) | 0.08 (0.45) | 0.01 (0.90) |
2. I found it very easy to use. | −0.04 (0.74) | −0.15 (0.16) | −0.24 (0.03) | 0.08 (0.45) | −0.06 (0.59) |
3. The number of items was adequate. | 0.01 (0.96) | −0.05 (0.64) | −0.19 (0.08) | 0.22 (0.04) | −0.04 (0.74) |
4. It was easy for each item to know the assessment of each group. | 0.01 (0.97) | 0.04 (0.73) | −0.12 (0.29) | 0.10 (0.34) | −0.04 (0.72) |
5. Having the rubric it is easier to prepare a presentation to get a good mark. | 0.22 (0.04) | 0.04 (0.69) | −0.10 (0.39) | 0.19 (0.08) | −0.01 (0.93) |
6. With the rubric you can evaluate more fairly. | 0.04 (0.71) | 0.01 (0.92) | −0.13 (0.23) | 0.24 (0.03) | −0.03 (0.79) |
7. The rubric has helped us to prepare the presentation. | 0.13 (0.25) | 0.06 (0.56) | 0.06 (0.60) | 0.13 (0.23) | −0.07 (0.52) |
8. The rubric includes the most important aspects of the presentation to evaluate. | −0.15 (0.16) | −0.18 (0.11) | −0.02 (0.86) | 0.20 (0.07) | −0.12 (0.26) |
9. I recommend using the rubric in future years. | −0.14 (0.21) | −0.14 (0.20) | −0.16 (0.16) | 0.34 (0.002) | −0.09 (0.41) |
10. Total rating (sum of all items; maximum rating = 45). | 0.03 (0.79) | −0.08 (0.47) | −0.20 (0.07) | 0.29 (0.008) | −0.08 (0.45) |
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Ferrer-Pardo, V.R.; Jimenez-Perez, I.; Gil-Calvo, M.; Pérez-Soriano, P.; Priego-Quesada, J.I. Relationship between Students’ Perception of a Rubric for Oral Presentations and Their Academic Characteristics. Educ. Sci. 2022, 12, 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12110765
Ferrer-Pardo VR, Jimenez-Perez I, Gil-Calvo M, Pérez-Soriano P, Priego-Quesada JI. Relationship between Students’ Perception of a Rubric for Oral Presentations and Their Academic Characteristics. Education Sciences. 2022; 12(11):765. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12110765
Chicago/Turabian StyleFerrer-Pardo, Víctor Raul, Irene Jimenez-Perez, Marina Gil-Calvo, Pedro Pérez-Soriano, and Jose Ignacio Priego-Quesada. 2022. "Relationship between Students’ Perception of a Rubric for Oral Presentations and Their Academic Characteristics" Education Sciences 12, no. 11: 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12110765
APA StyleFerrer-Pardo, V. R., Jimenez-Perez, I., Gil-Calvo, M., Pérez-Soriano, P., & Priego-Quesada, J. I. (2022). Relationship between Students’ Perception of a Rubric for Oral Presentations and Their Academic Characteristics. Education Sciences, 12(11), 765. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12110765