Title: Assessment strategies for pluralism
1Assessment strategies for pluralism
- Andrew Mearman
- (University of the West of England)
- and Don Webber
- (Auckland University of Technology)
2May create unreasonable certainty
May demotivate those who question
May achieve reduced depth
Teaching one view
May encourage rote learning without criticism
May not aid policy analysis
May not challenge the lecturer
May not provide information useful to the student
3Economic theory and policy
- Aims
- Expose students to theory and policy debates
- Develop students knowledge within and across
theoretical perspectives - Demand students display critical thinking and
find evidential bases for claims - Demand students recognise limitations of all
theory and develop judgement
4(No Transcript)
5Assessment and pluralism
- We adopted the following assessment strategy
- Presentations
- These covered topics which built on each other
during the course of the module - Students in group presentations were particularly
encouraged to take perspectives which were in
stark contrast to other presenters perspectives - A variety of literature needed to be made
available for the students. The lecturer needed
to source the variety of perspectives for the
students in advance. - Assessed discussions
- Essay
- Exam
6Assessment and pluralism
- We adopted the following assessment strategy
- Presentations
- Assessed discussions
- Open questions.
- Students knew and prepared for assessed
discussion in advance - Students were encouraged to follow their own
personal thoughts, backed up by theory and
empirical evidence - Needed 2 members of staff present
- Essay
- Exam
7Assessment and pluralism
- We adopted the following assessment strategy
- Presentations
- Assessed discussions
- Essay (2000 words)
- E.g. Should we reduce income inequalities if we
wish to reduce unemployment? - Economic policy making in open economies
requires, above all, more sophisticated economic
modelling. Discuss - Exam
8Assessment and pluralism
- We adopted the following assessment strategy
- Presentations
- Assessed discussions
- Essay
- Exam
- Needed to make sure all questions were
interlinked - Aim was that students display skills of
criticism, comparison and judgement
9Lomax (2004, p. 1) says that success has many
parents, and the trend to low inflation is no
exception. But there is a broad consensus that
better monetary policies run by more independent
and more open central banks can claim a
significant share of the credit. Constructively
criticise this perspective with reference to a
range of literature.
10Student feedback
- the most difficult module I took, but also the
most rewarding - difficult assessment, but an important skill to
develop - Students seemed to put in more effort to make
sure they didnt lose face in front of their
friends (peer pressure). - Students marked generally harder but remained
positive about module
11But
- I do not see the relevance of discussion, apart
from the building of confidence - hard to know what was going to come up
- More structure (in assessed discussions)
neededdifficult to know if a point is being
laboured - it took my time away from study for other
modules - I think this assessed discussion was a lot
harder than the last one due to the lack of
information accessible to me, whereas before
there were around 50 journals articles, this
time I struggled to find 5
12Conclusions
- Dont follow this path!
- It takes too much time and effort!
- Try this pluralistic teaching method.
- It might even increase the utility you receive
from teaching!