310 likes | 627 Views
"When it comes to giving feedback some staff stop at nothing! ”. Effective Written Feedback? Chris Glover Learning and Teaching Institute Sheffield Hallam University. Effective Feedback?.
E N D
"When it comes to giving feedback some staff stop at nothing!” Effective Written Feedback? Chris Glover Learning and Teaching Institute Sheffield Hallam University
Effective Feedback? I am returning this otherwise good typing paper to you because someone has printed gibberish all over it and put your name at the top. English Professor (Name Unknown), Ohio University What feedback are we giving?
Why give feedback • To justify the grade • to the student? • to externals? • To help tutors give the grade? • To enable students to improve future performances?
Feedback issues 1. NSS suggests • feedback not prompt • comments not detailed • feedback not help clarify what need to understand • If this 'true', difficult for students to act on feedback 2. Perception of many tutors that students don't read feedback - only interested in mark 3. Students claim that they do read feedback, and would engage with it, BUT.......
Timeliness • If return of feedback must/should be prompt • why isn't it returned promptly? • is there too much work to mark? • does it take too long to mark the work? • is this because assessments too large? • do you provide too much feedback - spend too much time marking? • If students do not get feedback in time to do anything with it, they probably won't do anything with it • BUT it is argued that they can't do anything anyhow because assessment a 'one-off' - subject specific, and they won't be doing anything like that again
Quantity of feedback • too much feedback to do anything with? • not enough feedback to do anything with? • is it necessary to correct everything all the time? • are some things not 'worth' correcting?
Feedback understandable? • students do not understand the feedback • what does 'be more critical' mean? • the feedback is not legible
Student focus??? • When we put comments like e.g. • "Take care with apostrophes" • - do the students have any idea at all what we mean? • "If I'd have known that when I was doing the work I'd have put it. What am I supposed to do with this?" • Student interviewed
To those who care about punctuation....... • ....... a sentence such as “Thank God its Friday” (without the apostrophe) rouses feelings not only of despair but of violence. The confusion of the possessive “its” (no apostrophe) with the contractive “it’s” (with apostrophe) is an unequivocal signal of illiteracy and sets off a simple Pavlovian “kill” response in the average stickler. • Lynne Truss: • Eats, Shoots & Leaves. The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation
Student apathy • Students don't read feedback because they can't be bothered.....? • BUT • faults in system • students can't easily get to collect their work • work not where it's supposed to be • authoritarian/inflexible system
Quality of feedback • Feedback not helpful • does not feed forward • Need for tailored feedback - relevant to student • Call for radical change in school • England's schools minister has called for radical change in classrooms to "personalise" every child's learning. • Jim Knight told a conference in Preston he wanted a system in which no child was stuck in a rut or fell behind. • He was speaking after the publication of a government-commissioned review of the issue, which has recommended a "learning guide" for every child. • Different feedback for different quality of work?
What is good feedback? Encourages teacher and peer dialogue around learning Provides opportunities to close the gap between current and desired performance Helps clarify what good performance is (goals, criteria, standards) Good feedback Provides information to teachers that can be used to help shape teaching Delivers high quality information to students about their learning Encourages positive motivational beliefs and self esteem Facilitates the development of self-assessment and reflection in learning
Good feedback should... Enable students to close performance gap Provide constructive criticism Avoid personal judgements Highlight areas of strength Good feedback Avoid authoritarian language Give guidance relevant to future work (feeds forward) Motivate by praise and encouragement Encourage further learning
Amongst yourselves....... • Is yours any/all of the above? • How do you know?
Feedback example • Design (20%) 15 • Functionality (20%) 15 • Accessibility (20%) 15 • JavaScript (10%) 0 • Content (30%) 15 • Total 60% • Comments • some of the images need tagging • needs more content
Amount of feedback a performance indicator? • If I’ve got a student with an assignment with 80%, I still find something to write on it. But I just give them a big pat on the back and say ‘keep up the good work’ probably. If I got a 30%, I’d write a lot more because that’s where I think there’s more to do. I would write more on a weaker script, yes.
We found... • There is little or no relationship between the amount of feedback given and the mark received • There is little or no relationship between the depth, or quality, of feedback given and the mark received.
Some Questions • What expectations are there that students will/ought to 'do their corrections'? • If none - for whose benefit/for what purpose is the feedback? • Is it true that subject specific assessments only contain one-off material? • generic / skill based /transferable? • Are students aware of the difference? • Is it clear to them that some feedback is useful for all kinds of work? • Are assessments structured so that students can use feedback from one piece when doing another?
Hypothesis • We spend too much time and effort giving feedback that is unnecessary and/or incomprehensible • Often much of this feedback is more for the benefit of others**, and not for the student • This feedback may well be aligned to assessment criteria, but these are too vague, and open to too much interpretation • e.g. what IS a reasonable level of English? Do we agree?
For tutors, a further question may be: • If the feedback given is to emphasise improvement in future assignments, will students benefit from reading hyperspecific corrections written by their instructors? • "Most college students have been reading such corrections for years; if they were helpful, they would have helped by now." • (Willingham, 1990 p12).
So why bother? • Do we need to give all the feedback all the time? • for whose benefit is it? • Will students act on any of it? • Students may not understand feedback and may not be able to act on it • Do we REALLY expect them to? • If we give too much, will the more important things be lost? • How much of the feedback we give is REALLY useful, or REALLY matters?
References • Truss, L. (2003) Eats, Shoots and Leaves. The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation, London, Profile Books Ltd. • Willingham D. B. (1990). Effective Feedback on Written Assignments, Teaching of Psychology, 17 (1) 10-13.ref • Cartoons courtesy of Matt Powell • http://homepages.paradise.net.nz/mattpowe/index.html • Examples of Apostrophe Misuse - The Apostrophe Protection Society • http://www.apostrophe.fsnet.co.uk/