posted on 2007-12-01, 00:00authored byJoseph O'Toole
Assessment is a significant issue for learning in the workplace. In some professions there are key indicators of success shared by workplace and academic supervisors alike. Beyond specific professions, however, assessment becomes more diffuse in workplaces that do not have explicit criteria established to judge performance of students in experiential learning. Assessing learning in these workplaces may be associated with methods that rely more upon student self appraisal and workplace supervisor reports. This article reports on the approach used for assessment in a public policy internship program in one Australian university - Deakin University in Victoria. The article argues that assessment, rather than being an add-on or a test of pre-ordained information, is central to the process of learning itself. This means that before students embark upon a policy internship they need to build their critical thinking abilities; i.e. a process of purposeful, self- regulatory judgment. Secondly they need to discuss how to negotiate their tasks in different workplaces and how to produce the criteria to be used in their evaluation.
History
Journal
Education research and perspectives
Volume
34
Pagination
51 - 62
Location
Nedlands, W.A.
Open access
Yes
ISSN
0311-2543
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2007, University of Western Australia, Department of Education