TY - JOUR
T1 - Patterns in the form of formative feedback and student response
AU - Ellegaard, Marianne
AU - Damsgaard, Linn
AU - Bruun, Jesper
AU - Johannsen, Bjørn Friis
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2018/7/4
Y1 - 2018/7/4
N2 - Formative feedback currently receives attention as an effective means of increasing student learning. However, how to frame feedback to achieve the best effect is an ongoing debate. In this study we analyse a written data-set of 174 segments of teacher feedback and student response, coded using 10 emergent feedback and 14 response categories. As it is argued that feedback is a dialogue between students and teacher, links between feedback and response segments are viewed as a dialogical framework that we visualise and understand using network analysis. From this network we conclude that some ways of formulating feedback are more productive and likely to lead to types of responses that signify learning than others. We thus identify the reflection group of responses, consisting of the categories reflective response, explanation and students investigate own thinking. The feedback categories that link primarily to the reflection group are open question, wondering question and leading question, which we categorise as the questioning group of feedback. We discuss these patterns against a previously published framework, and by discussing specific examples we further our understanding of what makes feedback formative.
AB - Formative feedback currently receives attention as an effective means of increasing student learning. However, how to frame feedback to achieve the best effect is an ongoing debate. In this study we analyse a written data-set of 174 segments of teacher feedback and student response, coded using 10 emergent feedback and 14 response categories. As it is argued that feedback is a dialogue between students and teacher, links between feedback and response segments are viewed as a dialogical framework that we visualise and understand using network analysis. From this network we conclude that some ways of formulating feedback are more productive and likely to lead to types of responses that signify learning than others. We thus identify the reflection group of responses, consisting of the categories reflective response, explanation and students investigate own thinking. The feedback categories that link primarily to the reflection group are open question, wondering question and leading question, which we categorise as the questioning group of feedback. We discuss these patterns against a previously published framework, and by discussing specific examples we further our understanding of what makes feedback formative.
KW - learning, educational science and teaching
KW - formativ feedback
KW - assessment
KW - didactics
KW - social work practice
KW - naturfagsdidaktik
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85034236275&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/02602938.2017.1403564
DO - 10.1080/02602938.2017.1403564
M3 - Journal article
SN - 0260-2938
VL - 43
SP - 727
EP - 744
JO - Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education
JF - Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education
IS - 5
ER -