File(s) under permanent embargo

Revisiting the impact of formative assessment opportunities in student learning

journal contribution
posted on 2005-01-01, 00:00 authored by M Peat, S Franklin, Marcia Devlin, M Charles
This project developed as a result of some inconclusive data from an investigation of whether a relationship existed between the use of formative assessment opportunities and performance, as measured by final grade. We were expecting to show our colleagues and students that use of formative assessment resources had the potential to improve performance of first year students. This first study, undertaken in semester 1 2002, indicated that there was no apparent relationship between the two, even though the students reported how useful they found the formative assessment resources. This led us to ask if there was a transition effect such that students were not yet working in an independent way and making full use of the resources, and/or whether in order to see an effect we needed to persuade non-users of the resources to become users, before investigating if use can be correlated with improvement in performance. With the 2002-3 NextEd ASCILITE Research Grant we set out to repeat our project and to look at use and usefulness of resources in both first and second semester, to encourage non-users to become users and to investigate the relationship between use and performance. Now our story has a different ending.

History

Journal

Australasian journal of educational technology

Volume

21

Issue

1

Pagination

102 - 117

Publisher

ASCILITE and ASET

Location

Como, W.A.

ISSN

1449-3098

eISSN

1449-5554

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

ASCILITE

Usage metrics

Categories

Keywords

Exports