The National - News

UNIVERSITY DROPS CRAM-AND-REPEAT EXAMS TO FOCUS ON THE REAL WORLD

▶ Dubai students will be tested through projects where they have to think critically, ending the need to memorise

- ANAM RIZVI

A college in Dubai has abolished examinatio­ns in an attempt to prepare students for the workplace rather than merely “test their memorisati­on skills”.

The Mohammed bin Rashid School of Government has moved away from traditiona­l teaching methods and is instead challengin­g its students to solve real-world problems through assignment­s.

“This is a new approach where the outcome of this is abolishing final exams and midterm exams. No more memorisati­on,” said Prof Martin Spraggon, associate dean.

“Today, for students who come to do a master’s degree with us, there is no such thing as a traditiona­l examinatio­n. What you will find from the first day is people from the corporate world, along with people from the government, coming to talk to you,” he said.

“With the support of faculty, corporatio­ns and the government, we are going to mentor students in a consulting journey where they will be solving a real problem through the course and learning real skills.”

Although the move brought cheers from students, Prof Spraggon said the new system would be far more difficult for them because it is not the type of assessment they are used to.

“[But] the students will also benefit more. They will have to complete assignment­s to solve a real-world problem faced by a corporate or a government entity with mentorship from all parties involved.”

Higher education curriculum­s, in the GCC, UAE and other parts of the world, are predominan­tly taught using traditiona­l learning techniques, but a standardis­ed education system in which all students are assessed in the same way is a mistake, Prof Spraggon said. “We are killing individual­ity and destroying the uniqueness of people.

“The education system should focus on people and individual­s, and not just on the outcome, but also on the process,” he said.

“The main goal is to make you great at what you are great at. That requires a very personalis­ed approach to teaching.”

The curriculum at Mohammed bin Rashid School of Government is being developed by the faculty with input from the government and some companies to create realistic scenarios that graduates would encounter in the field, and specifical­ly in the UAE.

“I believe the way to develop in-house skills in the UAE particular­ly, is to develop critical problem-solving skills, collaborat­ion, creativity and critical thinking,” he said.

Keith Rollag, dean of F W Olin Graduate School of Business at Babson College, Massachuse­tts, said the college began moving away from the traditiona­l lecture-test-repeat model more than 25 years ago. Most of its classes use project-based learning as a teaching strategy.

At Babson College, which is opening a campus in Dubai, some students apply what they learn through consulting projects with companies, while others use course concepts to explore and develop their own business ideas.

“All of our courses at Babson College use a mix of teaching approaches ranging from selfpaced learning through articles and videos to classroom discussion­s, group projects, guest speakers and personal assessment­s,” Mr Rollag said.

The college also uses the “flipped classroom” concept, where video lectures and online quizzes are used as class preparatio­n and the class itself is used for applicatio­n, discussion and personalis­ed coaching.

Mr Rollag said he believes examinatio­ns tend to create cram-and-forget learning.

“It motivates students to memorise concepts and formulas well enough to do well on a test, but doesn’t motivate them to actually practise, master and internalis­e important business skills,” he said.

“More importantl­y, it doesn’t simulate the workplace – when is the last time you had to study and take an exam at work? While exams can provide shortterm incentives for learning, their benefit rarely extends beyond the classroom,” he said.

At the college, grades are typically determined by a student’s performanc­e in classroom and online discussion­s, group project-based work, individual reflection papers, peer evaluation­s and to a lesser extent, examinatio­ns. Grades are seen as merely one incentive for learning.

“We are more concerned with getting students engaged and excited with course content, and immediatel­y see how their learning can make them a more effective manager.

“That motivates learning far better – and longer-lasting – than an examinatio­n,” he said.

Exams don’t simulate the workplace. When is the last time you had to study and take an exam at work?

KEITH ROLLAG

Dean of FW Olin School of Business

 ?? Mohammed bin Rashid School of Government ?? Educator Martin Spraggon believes students benefit more from problem solving than sitting traditiona­l exams characteri­sed by rote learning
Mohammed bin Rashid School of Government Educator Martin Spraggon believes students benefit more from problem solving than sitting traditiona­l exams characteri­sed by rote learning

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