Title: Enhancement Theme: Assessment
1Enhancement Theme Assessment
- Title
- Rethinking Formative Assessment a model and
seven principles of good feedback practice. - Dr David Nicol, Centre for Academic Practice,
University of Strathclyde - 30th November 2004 Scottish Hotel School
2Background
- SENLEF project funded by LTSN
- 50 case studies from Scottish HEIs
- Literature review model of formative assessment
and feedback and 7 principles of good feedback
practice simple strategies - Web site
- http//www.heacademy.ac.uk/senlef.htm
3Definitions (1)
- Formative assessment refers to-
- .assessment that is specifically intended to
provide feedback on performance to improve and
accelerate learning (Sadler, 1998, p77)
4Definitions (2)
- Who is involved in formative assessment and
feedback? - Tutor
- Peer
- External (e.g. placement supervisor)
- Computer generated
- Self
5Why take formative assessment and feedback
seriously?
- Black and Wiliam (1998) 250 studies
- Real classroom situations tutor, peer and
self-feedback - Positive benefits on learning and achievement
across all content areas/ skills and sectors. - Big impact on schools but what about HE?
6Current thinking about learning assessment
- Teaching/learning paradigm
- Transmission
Constructivist
student-centred
Assessment paradigm Transmission
teacher-centred
7Problems with transmission view
- Lifelong learning depends on self-regulation
(Boud, 2000) - Feedback messages from teachers must be actively
interpreted (Higgins et al, 2001) - Motivational beliefs both regulate and are
regulated by external feedback (Dweck, 1999) - Teacher workload issues
8How to conceptualise formative assessment
feedback?
- process that build up the students own skills
and capacity to self-evaluate and self-correct.
throughout u/g degree
9Sadlers argument
- For feedback to benefit learning students must
know - 1. What good performance is (goals, criteria)
- 2. How current performance relates to good
performance (compare) - 3. How to act to close the gap
-
- No 2 means that students must already possess
some of the same evaluative skills as the
teacher (Sadler, 1983).
10Self-regulated learning
- Self-regulated learning is an active constructive
process whereby learners set goals for their
learning and monitor, regulate, and control their
cognition, motivation, and behaviour, guided and
constrained by their goals and the contextual
features of the environment. (Pintrich and Zusho,
p64)
11Research on self-regulation
- The more self-regulated the student the better
the learner confident, persistent etc
(Zimmerman, 2000 Pintrich Zusho, 2002). - Students can learn to self-regulate through
making learning explicit and meta-cognitive
training (Boekaerts et al, 2002) - Monitoring and self-assessment are key components
of self-regulation (Butler and Winne, 1997
Nicol,2004). - Formative assessment and self-regulation
traditionally seen as separate paradigms
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13Key message
- Formative assessment and feedback by others can
only have an impact on learning when it
influences a students own self-regulatory
processes (adapted from Boud, 1995). - Students are already self-assessing and
generating feedback so we should build on this
capacity (Nicol, 2004)
14Discussion Point
- Discuss the conceptual model and identify any
questions you have? - Can you identify any examples in your teaching
where there is a specific focus on the
development of learner self-regulation?
15The Seven Feedback Principles
- How can assessment and feedback help to build a
learners capacity to self-regulate?
16Helps clarify what good performance is (goals,
standards, criteria)
- Difficult to use feedback to self-regulate if
students dont understand goals - Research
- Mismatches between tutors and students
conceptions of goals/criteria (Hounsell, 1984
Norton, 1990 Channock, 2000) - Strategies
- Exemplars of performance (Orsmond et al, 2002),
students help construct criteria (Gibbs, 1999)
17Facilitates development of self-assessment in
learning
- Key process in self-regulation is self-assessment
- Research
- Training in self-assessment improves exam
performance (McDonald and Boud, 2003) - SA integrated with external feedback improves
performance. (Taras, 2003) - Strategies
- Peer assessment (Boud, 2001), supporting
reflection (Cowan, 1999) etc.
18Delivers high quality information to students
about their learning
- External feedback should help students trouble
shoot and correct their own performance - Research
- Shows feedback might be delayed, not relevant,
overwhelming in quantity, focused on low level
goals (Sadler, 1983 Freeman Lewis, 1998) - Strategies
- Offering corrective advice in terms of criteria
- Reader response theory (Lunsford, 1997)
19Encourages teacher and peer dialogue around
learning.
- Students dont understand the feedback given by
tutors ( essay is not sufficiently analytical)
Channock, 2000 Hyland, 2000 - Research
- Ideal feedback two-way dialogical
teacher-student (Laurillard, 2003) not enough
teachers - Strategies
- Classroom technologies (Nicol Boyle, 2003)
- Peer processes (Gibbs, 1999)
20Encourages positive motivational beliefs and
self-esteem.
- Feedback has positive or negative effects
depending on type, delivery etc. - Research
- Feeback as marks versus comments (Butler,
19871988 Dweck, 2000). - Strategies
- More low stakes assessments
- Marks only after feedback used
21Provides opportunities to close the gap between
current and desired performance.
- How do you ensure that students actually use the
feedback information to improve. - Research
- Little opportunity to resubmit (Boud, 2000
Yorke, 2003) - Strategies
- Feedback on work in progress (plans, drafts,
sketches) - Action points and resubmissions.
22Provides information to teachers that can be used
to shape teaching.
- Being sensitive to learner needs
- Research
- Teachers dont necessarily adapt teaching to
students needs (Ramsden, 1997) - Strategies
- Angelo Cross (1990) one minute paper
- Classroom Technology (Boyle Nicol, 2003.
- Electronic discussion boards where students can
post difficulties
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24- Paper
- Nicol and Macfarlane-Dick (2004).
- Title Formative assessment and self-regulated
learning A model and seven principles of good
feedback practice. - Submitted to
- Studies in Higher Education (under review)
25Discussion
- Sharing good practice in the discipline
- Identify any examples from your subject teaching
where more than one principle of effective
feedback operates and that you would like to
share with the group.
26The End