Title: Assessment in Higher Education: where next
1Assessment in Higher Education where next?
- GEES conference
- Sally Brown
- PVC (Academic)
- Leeds Metropolitan University
2Approaches to innovative HE assessment
- How can we ensure students make the
- most of assessment as part of their
- overall learning experience?
- How can staff incorporate innovative assessment
approaches that are - manageable and fit-for-purpose?
- How can HEIs ensure that assessment strategies
support students and staff - while assuring quality?
3Some uncomfortable questions
- Are we certain that the way we assess students is
working? - Is Phil Race right when he says assessment is
broken? - Where is the quality in quality assurance?
- Do students understand what we are trying to do
with assessment? - Can assement actually help students learn?
4Current trends in HE design, delivery and
assessment
- A move towards blended learning as opposed to
e-learning or traditional face-to-face approaches
(assessment implications?) - Recognition of the centrality of assessment for
(rather than just of) learning (stop marking,
start assessing!) - The importance of teams rather than individuals
in assignment design - Recognition of divergent international approaches
to assessment
5My predictions for the next decade
- The move away from universities being the
guardians of content, where everything is about
delivery, towards universities having two major
functions - Recognising and accrediting achievement, where
ever such learning has taken place (not
necessarily in our university but from anywhere) - Supporting student learning and engagement.
6Some contextual issues
- Impact of the recession (staffing, etc)
- Central importance of student retention (balanced
with maintaining quality) - Impacts of the National Student Survey and
various other means of expressing student (dis)
satisfaction - NUS interest the National Feedback amnesty
- External scrutiny of quality of assessment,
particularly the quality and speed of turnaround
of feedback.
7Assessment methods and requirements probably
have a greater influence on how and what students
learn than any other single factor. This
influence may well be of greater importance than
the impact of teaching materials (Boud 1988)
8Students can avoid bad teaching they cant
avoid bad assessment. (Boud 1994)
9What are students getting like?
- More value(s)-conscious
- More litigious?
- More diverse
- Blurred distinction between part-time and
full-time students - Demonstrating the impact of different approaches
to study in schools (new 14-19 curriculum) - Having increased expectations of diverse kinds of
support.
10Implications of widening participation
- Ever more diverse student population
- Retention of diverse students is paramount
- Research (Yorke etc) tells us assessment is
central to retention - Feedback and feed forward are at the heart of
retention - Detailed and timely feedback is hugely demanding
of staff.
11Some sample innovatory approaches to assessment
- Assessment of learning in practice settings e.g.
use of PDAs on site in clinical settings (ALPS) - Use of blogs to assess reflective practice
- Groups projects to replace final year
dissertations - Exploratory work on computer-based assessment of
short answer questions - Assessment of multiple small tasks to demonstrate
achievement of practical competence (OSCEs, PASS) - Audio Feedback (Sounds good) www.soundsgood.org.
uk
12My fit-for-purpose model of assessment the key
questions
- Why are we assessing?
- What is it we are actually assessing?
- How are we assessing?
- Who is best placed to assess?
- When should we assess?
13To integrate assessment we need to realign it
with the curriculum by
- Exploring ways in which assessment can be made
integral to learning - Constructively aligning (Biggs 2003) assignments
with planned learning outcomes and the curriculum
taught - Providing realistic tasks students are likely to
put more energy into assignments they see as
authentic and worth bothering with - Us more and better formative assessment.
14The guru Sadler
- The indispensable conditions for improvement are
that the student comes to hold a concept of
quality roughly similar to that held by the
teacher, is able to monitor continuously the
quality of what is being produced during the act
of production itself, and has a repertoire of
alternative moves or strategies from which to
draw at any given point. In other words, students
have to be able to judge the quality of what they
are producing and be able to regulate what they
are doing during the doing of it. (Sadler
1989).(my italics)
15Formative and summative feedback two ends of a
continuum
- Formative assessment is primarily concerned with
feedback aimed at prompting improvement, is often
continuous and usually involves words. - Summative assessment is concerned with making
evaluative judgments, is often end point and
involves numbers.
16Whats the difference between formative
summative assessment?
- Summative contrasts with formative assessment in
that the former is concerned with summing up or
summarizing the achievement status of a student,
and is geared towards reporting at the end of a
course of study especially for purposes of
certification. It is essentially passive and does
not normally have immediate impact on learning,
although it often influences decisions which may
have profound educational and personal
consequences for the student.. (Sadler 1989).
17Using formative and summative assessment
appropriately
- Students often dont value formative assessment
- All assessment needs to be fair, consistent,
reliable, valid, manageable and transparent - Many assessment systems fail to clarify for
students the purposes of different kinds of
assessment activity - Low-stakes formative assessment helps students,
especially those from disadvantaged backgrounds,
understand the rules of the game.
18Some problems with formative assessment
- Students may not take it as seriously as
summative assessment, if it doesnt count - It can be hugely time consuming
- Students are likely to need different kinds of
formative assessment at different stages in their
learning journeys - It can be difficult to gauge how best to do it
with groups of students who may be at different
stages of development.
19How can we make students take feedback more
seriously? We can
- Spend time and energy helping students to
understand the importance of feedback and the
value of spending some time after receiving work
back to learn from the experience. Most students
dont do this at the moment, concentrating
principally on the mark. - Withhold the mark until after the student has
received and responded to feedback - Provide assessed opportunities for reflection on
previously marked work.
20We can make feedback timely
- Aim to get formative feedback on work back to
students very quickly, while they still care and
while there is till time for them to do something
with it. - The longer students have to wait to get work
back, especially if they have moved into another
semester by the time they receive their returned
scripts, the less likely it is that they will do
something constructive with lecturers
hard-written comments. - Dont bother with detailed feedback for
non-continuing students
21We can concentrate formative feedback where it
can do most good
- Dont give detailed written feedback to students
on work that is handed back at the end of the
semester if that area of study is no longer being
followed by the student just give a mark or
grade - Give more incremental feedback throughout the
semester (and if university systems dont allow
this, change the systems!) - Ensure that students at the top end of the
ability range dont feel short changed by minimal
feedback.
22Use formative assessment to promote independence
- Investigate how learning can be advanced in small
steps using a scaffolding approach - Provide lots of support in the early stages when
students dont understand the rules of the game
and may lack confidence - This can then be progressively removed as
students become more confident in their own
abilities.
23Consider providing opportunities for multiple
assessment
- Consider allowing resubmissions of work as part
of a planned programme - Students often feel they could do more will work
once they have seen the formative feedback and
would like the chance to have another go - Particularly at the early stages of a programme,
consider offering them the chance to use
formative feedback productively - Feedback often involves a change of orientation,
not just the remediation of errors.
24Use formative assessment to help students with
reading
- Help them also to understand that there are
different kinds of approaches needed for reading
depending on whether they are reading for
pleasure, for information, for understanding or
reading around a topic - Guide them to become active readers with a pen
and Post-its in hand, rather than passive
readers, fitting the task in alongside television
and other noisy distractions - Give them clear guidance in the early stages
about how much they need to read and what kinds
of materials they need to focus on.
25From Bowl (2003) Non-traditional students in HE
- The hardship was not understanding. When they
give you an assignment and say it was on this
handout. But my difficulty is not understanding
what to do at first I think that theres a lack
of my reading ability, which I cant blame anyone
for. I can only blame myself because I dont like
reading. And if you dont read, youre not going
to learn certain things. So I suppose thats to
do with me..its reading as well as putting what
you read into your essay. You can read it and
understand it. I can read and understand it, but
then you have to incorporate it into your own
words. But in the words they want you to say it
in, not just She said this, and this is the way
it should be. The words, the proper language. - (Bowl 2003 p90).
26Use formative assessment to help students with
writing
- Devote energy to helping students understand what
is required of them in terms of writing - Work with them to understand the various academic
discourses that are employed within the
subject/institution - Help them to understand when writing needs to be
personal and based on individual experience, such
as in a reflective log, and when it needs to be
formal and using academic conventions like
passive voice and third person, as in written
reports and essays.
27Involve students in their own and each others
assessment
- Consider ways of getting students to give each
other meaningful formative feedback - Shared reflection is the best means available to
help them really get inside the criteria - Asking students to review each others draft
material prior to submission particularly helps
those who lack confidence about what kinds of
things are expected of them.
28Providing opportunities for multiple assessment?
- Consider allowing resubmissions of work as part
of a planned programme - Students often feel they could do more will work
once they have seen the formative feedback and
would like the chance to have another go - Particularly at the early stages of a programme,
consider offering them the chance to use
formative feedback productively - Feedback often involves a change of orientation,
not just the remediation of errors.
29To integrate assessment we need to realign it
with the curriculum by
- Exploring ways in which assessment can be made
integral to learning. - Constructively aligning (Biggs 2003) assignments
with planned learning outcomes and the curriculum
taught - Providing realistic tasks students are likely to
put more energy into and play fairer with
assignments they see as authentic and worth
bothering with.
30Making assessment work well
- Intra-tutor and Inter-tutor reliability need to
be assured - Practices and processes need to be transparently
fair to all students - Cheat and plagiarisers need to be
deterred/punished (see bonus features) - Assessment needs to be manageable for both staff
and students - Assignments should assess what has been
taught/learned not what it is easy to assess.
31Students benefit if we can make feedback timely
- Aim to get feedback on work back to students very
quickly, while they still care and while there is
till time for them to do something with it. - The longer students have to wait to get work
back, especially if they have moved into another
semester by the time they receive their returned
scripts, the less likely it is that they will do
something constructive with lecturers
hard-written comments.
32Can we provide opportunities for multiple
assessment?
- Consider allowing resubmissions of work as part
of a planned programme - Students often feel they could do better once
they have seen the formative feedback and would
like the chance to have another go - Particularly at the early stages of a programme,
we can consider offering them the chance to use
formative feedback productively - Feedback often involves a change of orientation,
not just the remediation of errors.
33Using formative assessment to promote
independence and learning
- Investigate how learning can be advanced in small
steps using a scaffolding approach - Provide lots of support in the early stages when
students dont understand the rules of the game
and may lack confidence - This can then be progressively removed as
students become more confident in their own
abilities.
34Play fair with students by avoiding using final
language (Boud)
- Avoid destructive criticism of the person rather
than the work being assessed. - Try not to use language that is judgmental to the
point of leaving students nowhere to go. - Words like appalling, disastrous and
incompetent give students no room to manoeuvre. - However, words like incomparable and
unimprovable dont help outstanding students to
develop ipsatively either.
35However
- The sound recording on this assignment is
exemplary. I always feel as a tutor that I
should give you ideas on how to improve your work
further but I doubt you will ever in your life do
a drum recording that is better balanced and
pitched than this
36Play fair by giving feedback to students with
diverse abilities
- Students at the top end of the ability range
sometimes feel short changed by minimal feedback - Students with many weaknesses easily become
dispirited if there is too much negative
feedback - Consider giving an assessment sandwich. Start
with something positive, go into the detailed
critique and find something nice to say at the
end (to motivate them to keep reading!) - Explore ways to incentivise reading of feedback
- Consider which medium to use for students with
disabilities (e.g. dont use bad handwriting for
those with visual impairments or dyslexia!).
37Conclusions
- Concentrating on giving students detailed and
developmental formative feedback is the single
most useful thing we can do for our students,
particularly those who have had a struggle to
achieve entry to higher education. - Summative assessment may have to be rethought to
make it fit for purpose - To do these things may require considerable
imagination and re-engineering, not just of our
assessment processes but also of curriculum
design as a whole if we are to move from
considering delivering content the most important
thing we do.
38Useful references 1
- Biggs J (2003) Teaching for Quality Learning at
University (Maidenhead SRHE Open University
Press) - Bowl, M (2003) Non-traditional entrants to higher
education they talk about people like me Stoke
on Trent, UK, Trentham Books - Brown, S. Rust, C Gibbs, G (1994) Strategies
for Diversifying Assessment Oxford Centre for
Staff Development. - Boud, D. (1995) Enhancing learning through
self-assessment London Routledge. - Brown, G. with Bull, J. and Pendlebury, M. (1997)
Assessing Student Learning in Higher Education
London Routledge. - Brown, S. and Glasner, A. (ed.) (1999) Assessment
Matters in Higher Education, Choosing and Using
Diverse Approaches, Maidenhead Open University
Press. - Brown, S. and Knight, P. (1994) Assessing
Learners in Higher Education, London Kogan Page.
39Useful references 2
- Brown, S., Race, P. and Bull, J. (eds.) (1999)
Computer Assisted Assessment in Higher Education
London Routledge. - Carroll J and Ryan J (2005) Teaching
International students improving learning for
all Routledge SEDA series - Falchikov, N (2004) Improving Assessment through
Student Involvement Practical Solutions for
Aiding Learning in Higher and Further Education,
London Routledge. - Gibbs, G (1999) Using assessment strategically to
change the way students learn, In Brown S.
Glasner, A. (eds.), Assessment Matters in Higher
Education Choosing and Using Diverse Approaches
Maidenhead SRHE/Open University Press. - Kneale, P. E. (1997) The rise of the "strategic
student" how can we adapt to cope? in Armstrong,
S., Thompson, G. and Brown, S. (eds) Facing up to
Radical Changes in Universities and Colleges,
119-139 London Kogan Page.
40Useful references 3
- Knight, P. and Yorke, M. (2003) Assessment,
learning and employability Maidenhead, UK
SRHE/Open University Press. - McDowell E Brown S 1998 Assessing students
cheating and plagiarism, Red Guide 10/11
University of Northumbria, Newcastle - Mentkowski, M. and associates (2000) p.82
Learning that lasts integrating learning
development and performance in college and beyond
San Francisco Jossey-Bass. - Peelo, M and Wareham, T (eds) (2002) Failing
Students in higher education Buckingham, UK,
SRHE/Open University Press. - Sadler, D R (1989) Formative assessment and the
design of instructional systems Instructional
Science 18, 119-144. - Sadler, D R (1998) Formative assessment
revisiting the territory Assessment in Education
Principles, Policy and Practice 5, 77-84 - Pickford, R. and Brown, S. (2006) Assessing
skills and practice London Routledge.
41Useful references 4
- Race, P. (2001) A Briefing on Self, Peer Group
Assessment in LTSN Generic Centre Assessment
Series No 9 LTSN York. Race P. (2006) The
lecturers toolkit (3rd edition) London
Routledge. - Race P (2006) The Lecturers toolkit 3rd edition
London Routledge - Race P and Pickford r (2007) Making Teaching
work Teaching smarter in post-compulsory
education, London, Sage - Rust, C., Price, M. and ODonovan, B. (2003).
Improving students learning by developing their
understanding of assessment criteria and
processes. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher
Education. 28 (2), 147-164. - Ryan J (2000)A Guide to Teaching International
Students Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning
Development - Stefani L and Carroll J (2001)A Briefing on
Plagiarism http//www.ltsn.ac.uk/application.asp?a
ppresources.aspprocessfull_recordsectiongener
icid10 - Yorke, M. (1999) Leaving Early Undergraduate
Non-completion in Higher Education, London
Routledge.
42Bonus features
43Cheating and plagiarism why have concerns about
them increased?
- Mass access to HE.
- More reported bad practice.
- Changes in assessment practice.
- Wider use of communication and information
technologies, especially the web. - Higher stakes the importance of getting good
grades.
44How do new technologies change things?
- Plagiarism used to be hard workhours in the
library, researching what to copy..the
plagiarist used to learn a lot while trying to
get out of doing the work - Jim Evans, University of Warwick, quoted by Jude
Carroll, Oxford Brookes University.
45What is plagiarism?
- Passing off someone elses work as your own.
- Wholesale lifting of entire assignments/ texts.
- Patching and paraphrasing.
- Purchasing or commissioning work.
46What about unintentional plagiarism?
- Readers may not be conscious how much they have
themselves absorbed - Schools may encourage the learning and re-use of
model answers - In some cultures, your teacher or text books are
honoured sources and there is nothing in
appropriate about repeating their words.
47Tell-tale signs
- Outdated or obscure references
- Dramatic changes in writing ability
- Inappropriate cultural references
- Layout peculiarities
- American spellings/vocabulary (other than from US
students and those used by conventional spell
checkers). - Modified from Bill Johnson (2003) The concept of
plagiarism Manchester Metropolitan University
Learning and Teaching in Action Volume 2 No 1
48Four strategies to control plagiarism and cheating
- Use strict controls.
- Make the rules clear and have known penalties
(and apply them). - Design assessment instruments that make cheating
difficult. - Develop a climate that will reduce the likelihood
of cheating.
49 Design assessment instruments that make
cheating difficult
- Use openbook rather than closed book exams.
- Use assignments reliant on personal experience.
- Ask students to produce learning/reflective
journals and critical incident accounts. - Use vivas and orals.
- Design differentiated assignments.
- Provide assignments with choice and individual
activity.
50More anti-plagiarism assignments
- Use computer based assessment.
- Involve 3rd party verification.
- Ask them to provide photocopied annotated source
material. - Use group assessment.
- Involve an element of peer assessment.
- Give students tasks in learning teams.
- Monitor the production of assessed work use
staged assignments.
51Bonus features
- Using technologies to support assessment
52Use technologies to support assessment for
learning
- Employ computer-assisted formative assessment
with responses to student work automatically
generated by email - Students seem to really like having the chance to
find out how they are doing, and attempt tests
several times in an environment where no one else
is watching how they do - We can monitor what is going on across a cohort,
so we can concentrate our energies either on
students who are repeatedly doing badly or those
who are not engaging at all in the activity.
53Giving feedback electronically you can use
- Emailed comments from you to students on their
individual work. - As students sit the exam, put up generic feedback
on the VLE - Email overall generic comments on assignments to
the whole cohort of students or through a
computer conference. - Use computer-delivered feedback. (There is an
interesting OU research project currently being
undertaken to give formative feedback to students
on electronically submitted work).
54Computer-based assessment is valuable to learning
when
- It provides students with multiple opportunities
to test and re-test their understanding - It offers formative feedback in response to wrong
(and right) answers - It blurs the distribution between teaching and
assessment.
55CAA requires capital investment because
- Any fool can produce CAA (and a lot of fools do)
- Good CAA requires good pedagogic understanding,
up-to-date content and sound technological
systems - The investment of time to produce, pilot and test
good CAA resources must be extensive.
56Social networks can support assessment when
- There are clear purposes for the assessment of
learning opportunities - They foster a genuine shared learning
environment, aiming to build a learning
community - Students feel equally able to contribute to
network communities.
57They are less successful when
- Academics attempt to hijack students own social
networks for their own purposes - There is no clear focus for learning or
assessment activities in shared spaces - Tasks and activities are minimal/ tokenistic.
58Key questions on future TEL developments for
assessment
- How can we assess student learning effectively
and efficiently in ways that go
beyond multi-choice questions, so we are testing
deeper learning behaviours than simply recall and
memorisation? - How can we evaluate more effectively what
learning students have already and what more they
need to do in order to achieve the outcomes we
can recognise as being worthy of a degree or
other award? - How can we help students learn to differentiate
between poor quality and good quality content? -
59More questions
- How can we help students learn cooperatively in
ways that emulate but don't replicate their
social learning spaces (they hate it when they
find faculty staff intruding onto face book" and
yet they don't use the learning spaces we set up
for them much)? - Are there technology supported templates we can
develop which would be better than the cumbersome
and people-intensive APEL (Accreditation of Prior
Experiential learning) processes we currently
use.
60And some more
- How can we best make use of the technologies
almost all students have nowadays for assessment
(mobile phones, MP3 players, iPods, PDAs to
support learning? - Some of our distance learning students in
developing countries, don't have much in the way
of PCs or laptops but lots of them have mobile
phones.