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Fostering a culture shift in assessment and feedback through TESTA Professor Tansy Jessop Seminar at the University of Liverpool 13 March 2017
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Apr 09, 2017

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Page 1: Liverpool

Fostering a culture shift in assessment and feedback

through TESTA

Professor Tansy JessopSeminar at the University of Liverpool

13 March 2017

Page 2: Liverpool

What are the issues?

1. The central assessment problem at Liverpool is….

2. The main feedback problem is…

3. My blue skies idea is….

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This session

1. Brief overview of TESTA2. Why people find it useful3. Three problems TESTA addresses4. Four themes in the data with activities5. Solutions: a taster

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Mixed Methods approach

Programme Team

Meeting

Assessment Experience

Questionnaire(AEQ)

TESTAProgramme

Audit

Student Focus Groups

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Sustained growth

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TESTA….

“…is a way of thinking about assessment and feedback”

Graham Gibbs

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It enables you to see the whole elephant

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Three problemsThree problems

Problem 1: Something awry not sure why

Problem 2: Curriculum design problem Problem 3: The problem of educational change

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Problem 1: ‘Not sure why’ problem

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Problem 2: Curriculum design problem

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Does IKEA 101 work for complex learning?

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..has led to over-emphasising knowing (Barnett and Coate 2005)

• Knowing is about content• Acting is about becoming

a historian, actor, psychologist, or philosopher

• Being is about understanding yourself, orienting yourself and relating your knowledge and action to the world

Knowing

Being

Acting

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Blunt instrument curriculum

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The best approach from the student’s perspective is to focus on concepts. I’m sorry to break it to you, but your students are not going to remember 90 per cent – possibly 99 per cent – of what you teach them unless it’s conceptual…. when broad, over-arching connections are made, education occurs. Most details are only a necessary means to that end.

http://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/features/a-students-lecture-to-rofessors/2013238.fullarticle#.U3orx_f9xWc.twitter

A student’s lecture to her professor

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Problem 3: Educational change problem

Three misguided assumptions:

1. There is not enough high quality data.

2. Data will do it

3. Academics will buy it.

http://www.liberalarts.wabash.edu/study-overview/

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Proving is different from improving

“It is incredibly difficult to translate assessment evidence into improvements in student learning”

“It’s far less risky and complicated to analyze data than it is to act”

(Blaich & Wise, 2011)

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Paradigm What it looks like

Technical rational Focus on data and tools

Relational Focus on people

Emancipatory Focus on systems and structures

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TESTA themes and impacts

1. Variations in assessment patterns2. High summative: low formative3. Disconnected feedback4. Lack of clarity about goals and standards

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Defining the terms

• Summative assessment carries a grade which counts toward the degree classification.

• Formative assessment does not count towards the degree (either pass/fail or a grade), elicits comments and is required to be done by all students.

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1. Variations in assessment patterns

• What is striking for you about this data?

• How does it compare with your context?

• Does variation matter?

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Characteristic Range

Summative 12 -227

Formative 0 - 116

Varieties of assessment 5 - 21

Proportion of examinations 0% - 87%

Time to return marks & feedback 10 - 42 days

Volume of oral feedback 37 -1800 minutes

Volume of written feedback 936 - 22,000 words

Variations in assessment diets (n=73 UG degrees in 14 UK universities)

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Patterns on three year UG degrees (n=73 programmes in 14 universities)

Characteristic Low Medium High

Volume of summative assessment

Below 33 40-48 More than 48

Volume of formative only Below 1 5-19 More than 19

% of tasks by examinations Below 11% 22-31% More than 31%

Variety of assessment methods

Below 8 11-15 More than 15

Written feedback in words Less than 3,800 6,000-7,600 More than 7,600

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Theme 2: High summative: low formative

• Summative ‘pedagogies of control’

• Circa 2 per module in UK

• Ratio of 1:8 of formative to summative

• Formative weakly understood and practised

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Assessment Arms Race

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What students say about high summative

• A lot of people don’t do wider reading. You just focus on your essay question.

• In Weeks 9 to 12 there is hardly anyone in our lectures. I'd rather use those two hours of lectures to get the assignment done.

• It’s been non-stop assignments, and I’m now free of assignments until the exams – I’ve had to rush every piece of work I’ve done.

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Deep and Surface Learning (Marton and Saljo (1976)

Deep Learning• Meaning• Concepts• Active learning• Generating knowledge• Relationship new and

previous knowledge• Real-world learning

Surface Learning• External purpose• Topics• Passive process• Reproducing knowledge• Isolated and

disconnected knowledge• Artificial learning

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What students say about formative

• If there weren’t loads of other assessments, I’d do it.

• If there are no actual consequences of not doing it, most students are going to sit in the bar.

• It’s good to know you’re being graded because you take it more seriously.

• The lecturers do formative assessment but we don’t get any feedback on it.

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Good cop, bad cop?

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1) Low-risk opportunities for students to learn from feedback (Sadler, 1989)

2) Students fine-tune and understand requirements and standards (Boud 2000, Nicol, 2006)

3) Feedback to lecturers from formative tasks helps to adapt teaching (Hattie, 2009)

4) Cycles of reflection and collaboration (Biggs 2003; Nicol & McFarlane Dick 2006)

5) Distributes student effort (Gibbs 2004).

Why formative matters

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So, how do we do it?

Five case studies of successful formative

Your task will be to identify the principles that make them work

How could you adapt them?

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Case Study 1: Business School

• Reduction from average 2 x summative, zero formative per module

• …to 1 x summative and 3 x formative• Required by students in entire business school• All working to similar script• Systematic shift, experimentation, less risky

together

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Case Study 2: Social Sciences

• Education, Sociology and PGCert in HE degrees• Problem: silent seminar, students not reading• Blogging on current academic texts• Threads and live discussion• Linked to summative

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Case Study 3: Media degree

• Media degree• Presentations formative• Students get feedback (peer and tutor)• Refines their thinking for…• Linked summative essay

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Case study 4: Film and TV

• Seminar• Problem: lack of discrimination about sources• Students bring 1 x book, 1 x chapter, 1 x

journal article, 2 x pop culture articles• Justify choices to group• Reach consensus about five best sources

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Case study 5: Engineering

• Engineering• Problem low averages• Course requirement to complete 50 problems• Peer assessed in six ‘lecture’ slots• Marks do not count• Lectures, problems, classes, exams unchanged• Exam marks increased from 45% to 85%

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Your task

• In groups, identify five principles for making formative work. Write them down on flipchart paper.

• Devise an adaptation for your discipline, using the principles, and talk about what you already do, or what might work at your tables.

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Theme 3: Disconnected feedback

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Take five

• Choose a quote that strikes you.

• What is the key issue?

• What strategies might address this issue?

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What students say…

It’s difficult because your assignments are so detached from the next one you do for that subject. They don’t relate to each other.

Because it’s at the end of the module, it doesn’t feed into our future work.

Because they have to mark so many that our essay becomes lost in the sea that they have to mark.

It was like ‘Who’s Holly?’ It’s that relationship where you’re just a student.

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Actions based on evidence

• Conversation: who starts the dialogue?• Iterative cycles of reflection across modules• Quick generic feedback: the ‘Sherlock’ factor• Feedback synthesis tasks• Technology: audio, screencast and blogging• From feedback as ‘telling’…• … to feedback as asking questions

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Theme 4: Confusion about goals and standards

• Consistently low scores on the AEQ for clear goals and standards

• Alienation from the tools, especially criteria and guidelines

• Symptoms: perceptions of marker variation, unfair standards and inconsistencies in practice

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What the literature says…

Marking is important. The grades we give students and the decisions we make about whether they pass or fail coursework and examinations are at the heart of our academic standards (Bloxham, Boyd and Orr 2011).

Grades matter (Sadler 2009).

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What the papers say…

https://www.timeshighereducation.co.uk/news/examiners-give-hugely-different-marks/2019946.article

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QAA: a paradigm of accountability

• Learning outcomes• Criteria-based learning• Meticulous specification• Written discourse• Generic discourse (Woolf 2004)• Intended to reduce the arbitrariness of staff

decisions (Sadler 2009).

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What students say…We’ve got two tutors- one marks completely differently to the other and it’s pot luck which one you get.

They have different criteria, they build up their own criteria.

It’s such a guessing game.... You don’t know what they expect from you.

They read the essay and then they get a general impression, then they pluck a mark from the air.

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What’s going wrong here?

There are criteria, but I find them really strange. There’s “writing coherently, making sure the argument that you present is backed up with evidence”. Q: If you could change one thing to improve what would it be?A: More consistent marking, more consistency across everything and that they would talk to each other.

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But is this quite ‘normal’?

Differences between markers are not ‘error’, but rather the inescapable outcome of the multiplicity of perspectives that assessors bring with them

(Shay 2005, 665).

The tension between ‘the scientific aspirations of assessment technologies to represent an objective reality and the unavoidable subjectivities injected by the human focus of these technologies’

(Broadfoot 2002, 157).

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Explicit WrittenI justify

Co-creation and participation

Active engagement by students

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Having ‘an eye for a dog’

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The Art and Science of Evaluation

Judging is both an art and a science: It is an art because the decisions with which a judge is constantly faced are very often based on considerations of an intangible nature that cannot be recognized intuitively. It is also a science because without a sound knowledge of a dog’s points and anatomy, a judge cannot make a proper assessment of it whether it is standing or in motion.

Take them round please: the art of judging dogs (Horner, T 1975).

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Marking as social practice

The typical technologies of our assessment and moderation systems – marking memorandum, double-marking, external examiners – privilege reliability. These technologies are not in themselves problematic. The problem is our failing to use these technologies as opportunities for dialogue about what we really value as assessors, individually and as communities of practice

(Shay 2005).

Marking as social practice

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Taking action: internalising goals and standards•Regular calibration exercises•Discussion and dialogue•Discipline specific criteria (no cut and paste)Lecturers

•Rewrite/co-create criteria•Marking exercises •Exemplars

Lecturers and students

•Enter secret garden - peer review•Engage in drafting processes•Self-reflection

Students

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From this educational paradigm…

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Transmission Model

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Social Constructivist Model

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ReferencesArum, R, and Roksa, J. (2011) Academically Adrift: Limited Learning on College Campuses. University of Chicago Press.Blaich, C., & Wise, K. (2011). From Gathering to Using Assessment Results: Lessons from the Wabash National Study. Occasional Paper #8. University of Illinois: National Institution for Learning Outcomes Assessment.Bloxham, S. , P. Boyd, and Orr S. (2011) Mark my words: the role of assessment criteria in UK higher education practices. Studies in Higher Education. 36.6. 655-670.Boud, D. and Molloy, E. (2013) ‘Rethinking models of feedback for learning: The challenge of design’, Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 38(6), pp. 698–712. doi: 10.1080/02602938.2012.691462.Gibbs, G. & Simpson, C. (2004) Conditions which assessment supports students' learning. Learning and Teaching in Higher Education. 1(1): 3-31.Harland, T., McLean, A., Wass, R., Miller, E. and Sim, K. N. (2014) ‘An assessment arms race and its fallout: High-stakes grading and the case for slow scholarship’, Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education.Jessop, T. and Tomas, C. 2016 The implications of programme assessment on student learning. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education. Published online 2 August 2016. Jessop, T. and Maleckar, B. (2014). The Influence of disciplinary assessment patterns on student learning: a comparative study. Studies in Higher Education. Published Online 27 August 2014 Jessop, T. , El Hakim, Y. and Gibbs, G. (2014) The whole is greater than the sum of its parts: a large-scale study of students’ learning in response to different assessment patterns. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education. 39(1) 73-88.Nicol, D. (2010) From monologue to dialogue: improving written feedback processes in mass higher education, Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education, 35: 5, 501 – 517.O'Donovan, B , Price, M. and Rust, C. (2008) 'Developing student understanding of assessment standards: a nested hierarchy of approaches', Teaching in Higher Education, 13: 2, 205 — 217Sadler, D. R. (1989) ‘Formative assessment and the design of instructional systems’, Instructional Science, 18(2), pp. 119–144. doi: 10.1007/bf00117714.Shay, S.B. 2005. The assessment of complex tasks: A double reading. Studies in Higher Education. 30:663–79.Woolf, H. (2004) Assessment criteria: Reflections on current practices. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education 24:4 479-93.