50 likes | 233 Views
indispensable conditions for improvement (Sadler 1989). 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..
E N D
indispensable conditions for improvement(Sadler 1989) • 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 (knows the standard or goal) (recognises the ‘gap’ between their work and the standard) (can take action to fill the ‘gap’) This model helps to explain why some able and motivated students fail in HE
Tutor friendly formative feedback Tutor posts good examples of completed tasks on Blackboard Students peer assess tasks using assessment criteria Tutors give feedback on posters, presentations in class Tasks are done on-line (MCQs), auto marked giving immediate feedback Tutors put main effort into marking drafts (agreed with examiner), just checking for change and putting mark on final piece
Exercise • Take one assessment opportunity in a programme that you know. • Draw the Guidance and Feedback Loop on a sheet of flip paper • use post-its to identify ways the tutor can help the students understand the assessment and use their feedback for future assignments • Think about how the tutor can help them understand the standards, rules, procedures, expected of them.
The guidance and feedback loop: main steps Source: Hounsell et al (2007) http://www.cshe.unimelb.edu.au/colloq06/Hounsell3.pdf
The guidance and feedback loop: main steps • Pacing the introduction of new assessment methods • Choosing collaborative and enquiry-based assignments • ‘Unpacking’ tasks through questioning • Working with exemplars to ‘surface’ assessment criteria One-to-one dialogue with individual weak students to discuss feedback • Peer reviewing draft assignments • Practice assignments (for example, mock examination, practice presentations) • On-line self tests, • Discussing feedback with tutors/ peers • Comparing tutor feedback with self assessment and identifying ‘gaps’ • Discussing strategies to fill the gaps.