ABSTRACT

Feedback is a crucial element of teaching, learning and assessment. There is, however, substantial evidence that staff and students are dissatisfied with it, and there is growing impetus for change.


Student Surveys have indicated that feedback is one of the most problematic aspects of the student experience, and so particularly in need of further scrutiny. Current practices waste both student learning potential and staff resources. Up until now the ways of addressing these problems has been through relatively minor interventions based on the established model of feedback providing information, but the change that is required is more fundamental and far reaching.


Reconceptualising Feedback in Higher Education, coming from a think-tank composed of specialist expertise in assessment feedback, is a direct and more fundamental response to the impetus for change. Its purpose is to challenge established beliefs and practices through critical evaluation of evidence and discussion of the renewal of current feedback practices. In promoting a new conceptualisation and a repositioning of assessment feedback within an enhanced and more coherent paradigm of student learning, this book:

• analyses the current issues in feedback practice and their implications for student learning.
• identifies the key characteristics of effective feedback practices
• explores the changes needed to feedback practice and how they can be brought about
• illustrates through examples how processes to promote and sustain effective feedback practices can be embedded in modern mass higher education.

Provoking academics to think afresh about the way they conceptualise and utilise feedback, this book will help those with responsibility for strategic development of assessment at an institutional level, educational developers, course management teams, researchers, tutors and student representatives.

part I|74 pages

Current thinking

chapter |3 pages

Overview

part A|24 pages

The student voice

part B|24 pages

The wider picture – challenges to preconceptions

chapter 3|11 pages

Feedback on feedback

Uncrossing wires across sectors

chapter 4|13 pages

Assessment feedback

An Agenda for Change

part C|21 pages

Principles and practices

chapter 5|10 pages

Opening up feedback

Teaching learners to see

chapter 6|11 pages

Building ‘standards' frameworks

The role of guidance and feedback in supporting the achievement of learners

part II|67 pages

Enhancing the student role in the feedback process

chapter |3 pages

Overview

part A|33 pages

Students

chapter 7|12 pages

Involving students in the scholarship of assessment

Student voices on the feedback agenda for change

chapter 8|11 pages

Feedback unbound

From master to usher

chapter 9|10 pages

Feedback and feedforward

Student responses and their implications

part III|67 pages

Fostering institutional change

chapter |2 pages

Overview

chapter 13|13 pages

An assessment compact

Changing the way an institution thinks about assessment and feedback