1 / 12

Influencing critical engagement with assessment criteria

Influencing critical engagement with assessment criteria. Darrin Beattie, Careers Service Curriculum Development Officer Coherent Curriculum themes : assessment and feedback; student engagement. Career Development Modules (CDM).

alice
Download Presentation

Influencing critical engagement with assessment criteria

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Influencing critical engagement with assessment criteria Darrin Beattie, Careers Service Curriculum Development Officer Coherent Curriculum themes: assessment and feedback; student engagement

  2. Career Development Modules (CDM) • Suite of 4, year long, 20 credit work based learning modules for levels 5, 6 & 7 • 500+ students from a range of academic schools representing all three faculties • Part of Project 2012 • Assessment for learning • Transparency in assessment processes

  3. Intervention: annotations • Student use of annotations within CDM assignment 1 to identify specific passages that they believe are the strongest evidence for each assessment criterion.

  4. Intervention’s aim and objectives • Raise lower quartile of CDM marks by: • Promoting critical engagement with assessment criteria • “Testing” student understanding of assessment criteria • Generating more effective feedback • Evolving assessment criteria

  5. Assessment criteria

  6. Assignment 1: Exemplar. student annotations and related feedback Related passage within feedback : ...there is limited evidence of analysis in your discussions of goals, key issues and actions and this will improve by adopting a more critical and evaluative approach e.g. did you consider what may be causing teacher attitudes so as to ensure that how you made your offer to support sporting activities was sensitive to such issues? Related passage within feedback : “...there is evidence of both primary and secondary research in your assignment but when evident, has not been suitably developed as examples of applied learning e.g. what specifically did you learn about leadership through observing your supervisor that you then applied when leading small groups”? Passage from feedback referring to unconscious competence?: ...Learning RX is a better example of applied learning in that you have clearly related the new knowledge acquired from this source (learning styles) and presented an explicit example of your applying this knowledge (forces activity). The highlighted passage relates general learning Learning RX relates an explicit example of applied new knowledge...

  7. Unit reflections • Commonly misunderstood criterion easily identified • Students are critically engaging with the assessment criteria prior to submission • Student selected passages for annotation suggest unconscious competence in evidencing criteria • Easier to write formative feedback

  8. “Whispered” student feedback • It helped me grow from last year’s assignments and fully integrate each of the graduate skills in my role as a student tutor • Glad it was not worth any marks but very useful and unusual • I understand the need for a word limit but it was at times difficult to explain yourself to the fullest extent within the word limit

  9. Student feedback from MEQ • Likes: “The increased ability to evaluate self-performance”; “the level of learning independence. I also enjoyed the assessments”; • “Improves critical analysis and other skills”; “Focussed on assessment criteria”; • “Improved focus and drive in general towards work and studies as a result of this module”; • “The modes of assessment were good” • Dislikes: “Inflexible marking standard”; • “Extremely specific marking scheme”; • “The marking of the essay was very strict”; • “The marking scheme is too "tick box" style”; • “The formality of some examples, I struggled to understand some points”; “The assessment was repetitive and lacked clarification as to how to score higher marks” • “I don't think I could give three reasons, I love this module!”

  10. Review of aim and objectives • No discernible effect on CDM lower quartile mark, but intervention: • Has promoted critical engagement with assessment criteria • Does “test” understanding of assessment criteria • Produce more effective feedback • Will develop the assessment criteria

  11. Issues • Assessment criteria appearing in non-assessed annotation rather than assessed script • Perception of “jumping through hoops” • “Blunderbuss” approach to annotations render information meaningless

  12. Developments • Annotation minus rationale • More “effective” pitch to students • Feedback relating effective as well as less effective examples to specific criterion • Deeper analysis of impact

More Related