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Fly on the wall: can students' learning be enhanced by allowing them to witness their own summative assessment and feedback event?

  • Julian Rennie

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The Design studio learning system within New Zealand Tertiary Design Schools has a unique critique method, (often called 'The Crit'); The Crit event itself is rather a 'veiled' process and has been analyzed and written about extensively. There has also been some negative feedback from students that this form of critiquing process is not necessarily a good type of feedback process. Is there a method that protects the student's privacy related to his or her own design work and at the same time maintains the Design School's integrity of supplying reasoned and fair assessment within the wider Profession? A field trial scenario was designed and arranged with a group of volunteer design students, so each in turn, could sit-in and witness their own assessment / feedback session. This paper reports on this field trial, (timed to occur after the critique). This paper analyses this experiment, exploring the field trial responses, looking for links within a wider Educational literature base to the ground this 'Fly on the Wall' scenario within known pedagogies. NB. This scenario is not proposing to supplant 'The Crit,' rather the intention being in addition to it.
Original languageEnglish
JournalJournal of pedagogic development
Volume3.0
Issue number3.0
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2013
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Student Feedback
  • Student Assessment
  • Learning Transparancy
  • Feedback
  • Assessment

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