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Upgrading formative assessment in biology: beyond short answer questions alone

Upgrading formative assessment in biology: beyond short answer questions alone | Laboratory Medicine | Scoop.it
Short answer questions are currently ubiquitous in UK secondary biology education. They work well for providing objectivity. This gives them the current status as the go-to resource for summative – end-of-course, final grade – testing, typically as standardised GCSE-style exam questions. But there are trade-offs; the short-answer nature gives benefits, but also constraints: They fragment knowledge and so perform poorly at show interconnected thinking. They can often make it difficult for the tea
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Rescooped by Gilbert C FAURE from Virus World
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Coronavirus: New 90-minute Tests for Covid-19 and Flu 'Hugely Beneficial'

Coronavirus: New 90-minute Tests for Covid-19 and Flu 'Hugely Beneficial' | Laboratory Medicine | Scoop.it

The rapid tests for hospitals and care homes will distinguish between Covid-19 and seasonal illness. The "on-the-spot" swab and DNA tests will help distinguish between Covid-19 and other seasonal illnesses, the government said. The health secretary said this would be "hugely beneficial" over the winter.

 

Currently, a third of tests take longer than 24 hours to process. The announcement comes as the government pushed back a July target to regularly test all care home staff and residents - a key move to identify so-called silent spreaders, those who are infected but do not show symptoms. This is unlikely to be achieved until September because the number of testing kits has become more limited. The government said almost half a million of the new rapid swab tests, called LamPORE, will be available from next week in adult care settings and laboratories, with millions more due to be rolled out later in the year. Additionally, thousands of DNA test machines, which have already been used in eight London hospitals and can analyse nose swabs, will be available across NHS hospitals from September.

 

Around 5,000 machines, supplied by DnaNudge, will provide 5.8 million tests in the coming months, the Department for Health said. There is currently no publicly available data on the accuracy of the new tests. But Sir John Bell, Regius Professor of Medicine at Oxford University, who has been advising the government on tests, said they produced the same "sensitivity" as the current lab-based tests. The breakthrough on testing is important for a number of reasons - not just because one has the ability to test for flu and other viruses too. Firstly, speed. The fact the tests do not have to be sent off to a lab means the processing times are much quicker. In hospital, most tests - 9 in 10 - are currently turned around in 24 hours. But those done in the community via regional drive-through centres, using postal kits and mobile units, tend to take longer because they have to be sent away to labs for processing...


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