Title: Reconceptualising Assessment Feedback
1- Reconceptualising Assessment Feedback
HEA Research Grant Assessment of Student
Learning the relationships between staff and
student perceptions of the quality of feedback on
assignments in large first-year undergraduate
courses
Chris Beaumont, chris.beaumont_at_edgehill.ac.uk
Michelle ODoherty, odoherm_at_hope.ac.uk Lee
Shannon, shannol_at_hope.ac.uk
2Presentation Overview
- The importance of assessment feedback
- Feedback the issues
- Principles of good feedback practice
- Feedback and guidance practice
- Schools and Universities
- Reconceptualising guidance and feedback
- Putting it into practice
3The Importance of assessment feedback
- Student Perspective
- Assessment defines undergraduates perceptions of
the curriculum (Ramsden, 2003) and has a major
influence on their learning (Biggs, 2003 Boud,
2007) - Feedback is central to student learning feedback
is the most powerful single influence on student
achievement (Hattie, 1987 Black and Wiliam,
1998 2003). - action without feedback is completely
unproductive for the learner (Laurillard, 2002
p.55). - Staff perspective
- feedback is, a fundamental characteristic of
responsible and responsive learning systems
(Sadler, 1989 1998, p.79) - the provision of quality feedback is perceived as
a key requirement of effective teaching (Ramsden,
2003)
4Issues Feedback in HE
- Student Perspective assessment feedback is the
- least satisfactory aspect of student experience
- consistent low satisfaction scores for assessment
and feedback for the 2005, 2006 and 2007 National
Student Satisfaction surveys. - most concern surrounds the timeliness, quality
and effectiveness of feedback - Staff Perspective a major casualty is the
amount - and quality of feedback (Rust, 2001 p.4) Race,
1996. - ..higher education institutions have cut back
on assessment as well as class contact (Gibbs,
2006 p.15) - QAA subject reviews identify assessment practices
as one of weakest features (Rust, 2005). - a downward spiral. (Hounsell, 2007 p.103)
EXPANSION WIDENING PARTICIPATION
5So, What is Quality Feedback?
- Assessment involves identifying appropriate
standards - and criteria and making judgements about quality
(Boud, 2000 p.151)
Conditions Under Which Assessment Supports
Students Learning
Gibbs and
Simpson (2004-5)
6Good Feedback Practice ?
Seven Principles of Good Feedback Practice,
Nicol and Macfarlane-Dick (2004)
- Helps clarify what good performance is (goals,
criteria, expected standards). - Facilitates the development of self-assessment
(reflection) in learning. - Delivers high quality information to students
about their learning. - Encourages teacher and peer dialogue around
learning. - Encourages positive motivational beliefs and
self-esteem. - Provides opportunities to close the gap between
current and desired performance. - Provides information to teachers that can be used
to help shape the teaching.
Different Tutor/Student Perceptions of Quality
Feedback
3 Years
3 months
7Feedback theory into practice?
- Feedback is under-explored (Higgins et al, 2002)
- The main aims of the project were to
- investigate the impact of prior experiences of
assessment on students expectations of feedback
practices in higher education - explore tutors and students perceptions of what
is considered quality feedback and how this may
vary within and across disciplines - analyse any changes in students perceptions of
quality feedback throughout their first year
higher education experience - identify barriers to providing quality feedback.
8Research Activities/ Models
- Large scale qualitative study (Struyven et
al,2005 ) - Focus groups and semi-structured interviews
- 3 WP universities North-West Midlands and
London - 3 disciplines Psychology Performing Arts
Education - 6 WP schools/FE colleges WP profile in the
North-West - 172 students, 38 staff
- Control Questionnaires
- delivered at assessment milestones
- 241 responses
- Thematic analysis of transcripts
- (Braun Clarke, 2006)
9HE students Prior Experience
Perceptions of Quality Feedback (norms)
Sample size 180
10Feedback in FE The Dialogic feedback Cycle
DfC (FE)
11FE feedback - the solution?
- Perceptions of feedback in FE
- delivers improvements in grades
- not promote independent
- learning
- ..We are under so much pressure to get exam
results..we tend to spoon feed them as much as we
can FE Tutor - .. we were spoon fed practically at what we were
doing. HE student - Barriers to change
- Shared perception that feedback is fit for
purpose - FE tutors staff demands of
- league tables
- FE students need to pass exams
Dialogic feedback Cycle (FE)
12The Guidance and Feedback Loop in HE
Feed Forward into next Assignment /Assessment
(Hounsell et al 2008)
13Students Perceptions of Feedback Quality in HE
Formative vs Summative
Independence vs Guidance
14Summary of Findings
- Perceptions of quality feedback are influenced
by - Prior experience of feedback in FE as a guidance
process - formative dialogue
- never perceived as a single event
- delivers improvement in performance (grades)
- shared awareness of limitations spoon feeding
vs independent learning. - Impact of prior experience on first year in HE
- Feedback does not meet students expectations of
quality - Culture shock of Independent Learning
- Mis-match in tutors and students perceptions of
quality feedback - Shared awareness of constraints lack of time
staffstudent ratios - Barriers to change Tension expectations of
autonomy vs guidance - No change in perceptions
- Students perceptions of feedback quality do not
improve across the year this impacts upon
motivation and confidence. - Findings are consistent within and across
disciplines and institutions.
15Recommendations
Reconceptualise feedback as a feedforward
guidance process for self-directed learning
- Scaffold students into academic community of
practice through front loading (Rust, 2001) -
feedback as preparatory guidance. - Explicitly teach Self-Directed Learning skills to
help transition taking account of prior
assessment experiences - Protocols to encourage student engagement with
formative feedback to maximise feedforward - Staff Development training in feedback practice
and course design.
16The Dialogic feedforward Cycle (HE)
Df C (HE)
17Spiral Curriculum
Spiral Curriculum sustainable assessment for
learning using the Dialogic Feedforward Cycle
Scaffolding Independent Learning
.Fair enough, we shouldnt be spoon fed in uni ,
but at least we should have a spoon. First
year HE student
18Case Study Computing
(Whitfield and ODoherty et al, 2008)
19Summary
- Students expect feedback as a formative, guidance
process the Dialogic feedback Cycle. - in practice does not develop independent
learning. - HE culture expects self-directed learning.
- no systematic, integrated feedback process in HE
- quality is threatened by impact of economies of
expansion - A dialogic (Alexander, 2004) constructivist
approach is required in HE. - Feedback and guidance should be re-conceptualised
as a process using the Dialogic feedforward
Cycle. - spiral curriculum of differentiated assessment
activities - scaffold student autonomy for sustainable
assessment
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