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Improving student learning
through programme assessment:
Interactive TESTA masterclass
@solentlearning
@tansyjtweets
Tansy Jessop
TESTA Project Leader
Durham University
3 May 2018
Masterclass Session 1
• Your assessment and feedback highs and lows
• Brief explanation of TESTA
• Why a programme approach?
• Balancing summative and formative
• Mock audit (plenary)
• DIT audit (Breakout rooms)
Your experience of powerful assessment
Think of a time when you learnt powerfully from
an assessment task. What made it powerful?
Go to www.menti.com and use the code 33 96 62
Enter three words or phrases which capture
something about it
Your main assessment and feedback
challenges
Go to www.menti.com and use the code 95 45 94
Type in three words or phrases which capture
your main challenges
Assessment and feedback are central to
student learning
1) Assessment drives what students pay attention
to, and defines the actual curriculum (Ramsden
2003).
2) Feedback is the single most important factor in
learning (Hattie 2009; Black and Wiliam 1998).
Research and change process
Programme
Team
Meeting
Assessment
Experience
Questionnaire
(AEQ)
TESTA
Programme
Audit
Student
Focus Groups
Sustained growth
TESTA….
“…is a way of thinking
about assessment and
feedback”
Graham Gibbs
Why take a programme approach?
1. A modular problem
2. A curriculum problem
3. An alienation problem
4. A context problem
5. A counter-narrative
The modular degree
IKEA 101: great for flat-pack furniture but..
Curriculum privileges knowing stuff
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
A state of alienation?
Image, "Alienation Nightmare" © 1996 by Sabu
Motorways to alienation
• M1: Modules
• M2: Markets
• M3: Metrics
• M4: Mass higher education
TESTA improves students’ perceptions
of A&F…
60%
65%
70%
75%
80%
85%
90%
95%
Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 OS
AVERAGENSSSCORES
COMPARISON OF 32 PROGS IN 13 UNIVERSITIES WITH SECTOR SCORES
NSS 2015 SCORES TESTA SCORES
…and improves the staff experience
• Reduce summative assessments
(eg. From 48-24)
• More challenging and interesting
summative tasks
• More engaging sessions with
students participating in formative
• Better connections across the
curriculum
• Less content-driven curriculum,
and more process-oriented
Activity One: mock audit
Programme
Team
Meeting
Assessment
Experience
Questionnaire
(AEQ)
TESTA
Programme
Audit
Student
Focus Groups
The Audit: Caveats
1. Audit is not everything
2. Official discourse
3. Planned curriculum
4. Some better data, some weaker, some gaps
The Audit data
• Number of assessment tasks
• Summative/formative
• Variety
• Proportion of exams
• Written feedback
• Speed of return of feedback
• Some context
TESTA definitions
Summative:
graded assessment which counts towards the degree
Formative:
Does not count: ungraded, required task with
feedback
Mock Audit
DIY audit
• Form groups of 8, preferably with some
people from same discipline
• Flipchart and pens, ten step guide, and go to
a break out room
• Choose a programme and a facilitator from
outside that programme
• Run an audit on one level of the programme
• You have 20 minutes
• Come back here!
Audit wrap up
• How did it go?
• Any problems?
• Any questions?
• Any insights?
• Any refinements?
Assessment features across a 3 year UG degree (n=73)
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
Typical A&F patterns
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
Actions based on evidence
a) Reduction in summative
b) Increase in formative
c) Streamlined varieties
d) More or less feedback depending…
e) Quantifiable
f) Every time a coconut with each feature
Theme 1: 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
Assessment Arms Race
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.
CONSEQUENCES
OF HIGH
SUMMATIVE
It was really useful. We were assessed
on it but we weren’t officially given a
grade, but they did give us feedback on
how we did.
It didn’t actually count so that
helped quite a lot because it
was just a practice and didn’t
really matter what we did and
we could learn from mistakes so
that was quite useful.
WHAT ABOUT FORMATIVE?
If there weren’t loads
of other assessments,
I’d do it.
It’s good to know you’re
being graded because
you take it more
seriously.
BUT… If there are no actual
consequences of not doing
it, most students are going
to sit in the bar.
The lecturers do formative
assessment but we don’t get
any feedback on it.
Why it is broken
1. HE factory mass produced goods
2. Summative ‘pedagogy of control’
3. Ideas about student autonomy
get in the way
4. Not much conviction about
formative – lip service
5. Not programme-wide
“Between the idea
And the reality
Between the motion
And the act
Falls the Shadow”
T S Eliot, The Hollow Men
1) Low-risk way of learning from feedback (Sadler, 1989)
2) Fine-tune understanding of goals (Boud 2000, Nicol 2006)
3) Feedback to lecturers to adapt teaching (Hattie, 2009)
4) Cycles of reflection and collaboration (Biggs 2003; Nicol &
McFarlane Dick 2006)
5) Encourages and distributes student effort (Gibbs 2004).
Why formative matters
How to encourage formative
Go to www.menti.com and use the code 79 27 56
Choose your top three strategies for engaging
students in formative assessment
Case Study 1
• Systematic reduction of summative across
whole business school
• Systematic ramping up of formative
• All working to similar script
• Systematic shift, experimentation, less risky
together
Case Study 2
• Formative presentations
• Students get feedback (peer and tutor)
• Refines their thinking for…
• Conceptually linked summative essay
Case Study 3
• Problem: silent seminar, students not reading
• Public platform blogging
• Current academic texts
• In-class
• Threads and live discussion
• Linked to summative
Case Study 4
• Problem: lack of discrimination about sources
• Students bring 1 x book, 1 x chapter, 1 x
journal article, 2 x pop culture articles to
seminar
• Justify choices to group
• Reach consensus about five best sources
• Add to reading list
Case Study 5
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVFwQzlVFy0
Your principles
(from memory so with gaps)
• Collaborative, involves people and team work
• Public
• Makes links between formative and
summative but different from a mock
• Authentic research tasks
• Iterative – not one off
Your task
• In groups, identify five principles for making
formative work. Write them down on flipchart
paper.
• Devise one or two adaptations for your
discipline, using the principles, your experience
and the case studies.
• Add one adaptation to your poster that you
might use on your programme.
References
Barlow, A. and Jessop, T. 2016. “You can’t write a load of rubbish”: Why blogging works as formative
assessment. Educational Developments. 17(3), 12-15. SEDA.
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.
Gibbs, G. & Simpson, C. (2004) Conditions under 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. 2017. The implications of programme assessment on student learning. Assessment
and Evaluation in Higher Education.
Jessop, T. and Maleckar, B. 2016. 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 -217.
Sadler, D. R. 1989. ‘Formative assessment and the design of instructional systems’, Instructional Science,
18(2), pp. 119–144.
Tomas, C and Jessop, T. 2018. Struggling and juggling: A comparison of student assessment loads across
research and teaching-intensive universities. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education. 18 April.
Wu, Q. and Jessop, T. 2018. Formative assessment: missing in action in both research-intensive and teaching-
focused universities. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education. Published online 15 January.

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Improving student learning through programme assessment

  • 1. Improving student learning through programme assessment: Interactive TESTA masterclass @solentlearning @tansyjtweets Tansy Jessop TESTA Project Leader Durham University 3 May 2018
  • 2. Masterclass Session 1 • Your assessment and feedback highs and lows • Brief explanation of TESTA • Why a programme approach? • Balancing summative and formative • Mock audit (plenary) • DIT audit (Breakout rooms)
  • 3. Your experience of powerful assessment Think of a time when you learnt powerfully from an assessment task. What made it powerful? Go to www.menti.com and use the code 33 96 62 Enter three words or phrases which capture something about it
  • 4. Your main assessment and feedback challenges Go to www.menti.com and use the code 95 45 94 Type in three words or phrases which capture your main challenges
  • 5. Assessment and feedback are central to student learning 1) Assessment drives what students pay attention to, and defines the actual curriculum (Ramsden 2003). 2) Feedback is the single most important factor in learning (Hattie 2009; Black and Wiliam 1998).
  • 6.
  • 7. Research and change process Programme Team Meeting Assessment Experience Questionnaire (AEQ) TESTA Programme Audit Student Focus Groups
  • 9. TESTA…. “…is a way of thinking about assessment and feedback” Graham Gibbs
  • 10. Why take a programme approach? 1. A modular problem 2. A curriculum problem 3. An alienation problem 4. A context problem 5. A counter-narrative
  • 12. IKEA 101: great for flat-pack furniture but..
  • 14. 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
  • 15. A state of alienation? Image, "Alienation Nightmare" © 1996 by Sabu
  • 16. Motorways to alienation • M1: Modules • M2: Markets • M3: Metrics • M4: Mass higher education
  • 17. TESTA improves students’ perceptions of A&F… 60% 65% 70% 75% 80% 85% 90% 95% Q5 Q6 Q7 Q8 Q9 OS AVERAGENSSSCORES COMPARISON OF 32 PROGS IN 13 UNIVERSITIES WITH SECTOR SCORES NSS 2015 SCORES TESTA SCORES
  • 18. …and improves the staff experience • Reduce summative assessments (eg. From 48-24) • More challenging and interesting summative tasks • More engaging sessions with students participating in formative • Better connections across the curriculum • Less content-driven curriculum, and more process-oriented
  • 19. Activity One: mock audit Programme Team Meeting Assessment Experience Questionnaire (AEQ) TESTA Programme Audit Student Focus Groups
  • 20. The Audit: Caveats 1. Audit is not everything 2. Official discourse 3. Planned curriculum 4. Some better data, some weaker, some gaps
  • 21. The Audit data • Number of assessment tasks • Summative/formative • Variety • Proportion of exams • Written feedback • Speed of return of feedback • Some context
  • 22. TESTA definitions Summative: graded assessment which counts towards the degree Formative: Does not count: ungraded, required task with feedback
  • 24. DIY audit • Form groups of 8, preferably with some people from same discipline • Flipchart and pens, ten step guide, and go to a break out room • Choose a programme and a facilitator from outside that programme • Run an audit on one level of the programme • You have 20 minutes • Come back here!
  • 25. Audit wrap up • How did it go? • Any problems? • Any questions? • Any insights? • Any refinements?
  • 26. Assessment features across a 3 year UG degree (n=73) 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
  • 27. Typical A&F patterns 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
  • 28. Actions based on evidence a) Reduction in summative b) Increase in formative c) Streamlined varieties d) More or less feedback depending… e) Quantifiable f) Every time a coconut with each feature
  • 29. Theme 1: 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
  • 31. 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. CONSEQUENCES OF HIGH SUMMATIVE
  • 32. It was really useful. We were assessed on it but we weren’t officially given a grade, but they did give us feedback on how we did. It didn’t actually count so that helped quite a lot because it was just a practice and didn’t really matter what we did and we could learn from mistakes so that was quite useful. WHAT ABOUT FORMATIVE?
  • 33. If there weren’t loads of other assessments, I’d do it. It’s good to know you’re being graded because you take it more seriously. BUT… If there are no actual consequences of not doing it, most students are going to sit in the bar. The lecturers do formative assessment but we don’t get any feedback on it.
  • 34. Why it is broken 1. HE factory mass produced goods 2. Summative ‘pedagogy of control’ 3. Ideas about student autonomy get in the way 4. Not much conviction about formative – lip service 5. Not programme-wide “Between the idea And the reality Between the motion And the act Falls the Shadow” T S Eliot, The Hollow Men
  • 35. 1) Low-risk way of learning from feedback (Sadler, 1989) 2) Fine-tune understanding of goals (Boud 2000, Nicol 2006) 3) Feedback to lecturers to adapt teaching (Hattie, 2009) 4) Cycles of reflection and collaboration (Biggs 2003; Nicol & McFarlane Dick 2006) 5) Encourages and distributes student effort (Gibbs 2004). Why formative matters
  • 36. How to encourage formative Go to www.menti.com and use the code 79 27 56 Choose your top three strategies for engaging students in formative assessment
  • 37. Case Study 1 • Systematic reduction of summative across whole business school • Systematic ramping up of formative • All working to similar script • Systematic shift, experimentation, less risky together
  • 38. Case Study 2 • Formative presentations • Students get feedback (peer and tutor) • Refines their thinking for… • Conceptually linked summative essay
  • 39. Case Study 3 • Problem: silent seminar, students not reading • Public platform blogging • Current academic texts • In-class • Threads and live discussion • Linked to summative
  • 40. Case Study 4 • Problem: lack of discrimination about sources • Students bring 1 x book, 1 x chapter, 1 x journal article, 2 x pop culture articles to seminar • Justify choices to group • Reach consensus about five best sources • Add to reading list
  • 42. Your principles (from memory so with gaps) • Collaborative, involves people and team work • Public • Makes links between formative and summative but different from a mock • Authentic research tasks • Iterative – not one off
  • 43. Your task • In groups, identify five principles for making formative work. Write them down on flipchart paper. • Devise one or two adaptations for your discipline, using the principles, your experience and the case studies. • Add one adaptation to your poster that you might use on your programme.
  • 44. References Barlow, A. and Jessop, T. 2016. “You can’t write a load of rubbish”: Why blogging works as formative assessment. Educational Developments. 17(3), 12-15. SEDA. 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. Gibbs, G. & Simpson, C. (2004) Conditions under 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. 2017. The implications of programme assessment on student learning. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education. Jessop, T. and Maleckar, B. 2016. 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 -217. Sadler, D. R. 1989. ‘Formative assessment and the design of instructional systems’, Instructional Science, 18(2), pp. 119–144. Tomas, C and Jessop, T. 2018. Struggling and juggling: A comparison of student assessment loads across research and teaching-intensive universities. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education. 18 April. Wu, Q. and Jessop, T. 2018. Formative assessment: missing in action in both research-intensive and teaching- focused universities. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education. Published online 15 January.

Hinweis der Redaktion

  1. Tansy
  2. How do you measure soft stuff? 5 day cricket match versus 20/20
  3. What started as a research methodology has become a way of thinking. David Nicol – changing the discourse, the way we think about assessment and feedback; not only technical, research, mapping, also shaping our thinking. Evidence, assessment principles. Habermas framework.
  4. Disconnected seeing the whole degree in silos – my module, lecturer perspective (Elephant, trunk, ears, tusks etc) compared to student perspective of the whole huge beast. I realise that what we were saying is two per module
  5. Not so good for complex learning, integrating knowledge, lends itself to disposable curriculum fragmented learning. Amplified summative, less time for formative. Hard to make connections, difficult to see the joins between assessments, much more assessment, much more assessment to accredit each little box. Multiplier effect. Less challenge, less integration. Lots of little neo-liberal tasks. The Assessment Arms Race.
  6. Language of ‘covering material’ Should we be surprised?
  7. The TESTA report back of programme findings was by far the most significant meeting I have attended in ten years of sitting through many meetings at this university. For the first time, I felt as though I was a player on the pitch, rather than someone watching from the side-lines. We were discussing real issues. (Senior Lecturer, Education
  8. Teach Less, learn more. Assess less, learn more.