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FeedbackFeed forward in Engineering Education

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... build up the students own skills and capacity to self-evaluate and self-correct. ... Facilitates development of self-assessment in learning ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: FeedbackFeed forward in Engineering Education


1
Feedback/Feed forward in Engineering Education
  • Jane Pritchard - Learning and Teaching Advisor
  • Roger Penlington
  • Alan Webb
  • jane_at_engsc.ac.uk

2
Outline of the day
  • Welcome
  • Staff and student perceptions of what makes for
    'good ' or 'effective' feedback?
  • Good practice in feedback on formal reports,
    assignments and dissertations
  • Easing the academics burden of giving rapid
    return feedback
  • What is the Engineering Subject Centre
  • Summary

3
  • One piece of good feedback you have received
  • One piece of negative feedback you have received

4
Questions about feedback
5
Terminology
  • Formative Assessment
  • Assessment for providing feedback to learners in
    order to help them learn and feedback to teachers
    for deciding how a students learning should be
    taken forward.
  • Summative Assessment
  • Assessment which provides overall evidence of the
    achievement of students and of what they know,
    understand and can do, by assigning a value to
    what the student achieves.

6
Feedback AND Feed forward
  • Feedback
  • comments on a completed work that the student
    cannot repeat. The comments are useful to inform
    the student about strengths of their work and
    areas for further development in future
    assessments.
  • Feed forward
  • mostly what has been called feedback where a
    student has an opportunity to respond to the
    comments, e.g. a formative hand in
    constructive.

7
VIDEO MOMENT
8
Outline of SENLEF report
  • Briefing Paper on formative assessment and
    feedback and self-regulation of learning
  • Conceptual model
  • 7 principles of good feedback practice
  • Simple strategies
  • 50 case studies of good practice
  • Publication available on HEA website.

9
How 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

10
  • SENLEF PROJECT - Student Enhanced Learning
    through Effective Feedback
  • http//www.heacademy.ac.uk/ourwork/learning/assess
    ment/senlef

11
Sadlers 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
  • Implies that students must already possess some
    of the same evaluative skills as the teacher
    (Sadler, 1983).

12
Key message
  • Formative assessment and feedback by others can
    only have an impact on learning when it
    influences a students own self-regulatory
    processes - whereby learners set goals (adapted
    from Boud, 1995).

13
The Seven Feedback Principles
  • How can assessment and feedback help to build a
    learners capacity to self-regulate?
  • 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)

14
1. Helps 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)
  • Mock marking of assessments
  • Engage students in criteria - classroom/tutorials

15
2. Facilitates 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, supporting reflection etc.
  • Requesting feedback they would like

16
3. Delivers 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)
  • Strategies
  • Offering corrective advice in terms of criteria
  • Reader response theory (Lunsford, 1997) (3
    points praise sandwich PIE)

17
4. Encourages 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)
  • Bring examples of good feedback and why it was
    useful

18
5. Encourages 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

19
6. Provides 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)
  • Strategies
  • Feedback during the task (process)
  • Action points and resubmissions.

20
7. Provides 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.
  • Student-requested feedback

21
  • Helps clarify what good performance is (goals,
    standards, criteria)
  • Facilitates development of self-assessment in
    learning
  • Delivers high quality information to students
    about their learning
  • Encourages teacher and peer dialogue around
    learning.
  • Encourages positive motivational beliefs and
    self-esteem.
  • Provides opportunities to close the gap between
    current and desired performance.
  • Provides information to teachers that can be
    used to shape teaching.
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