Assessment, learning and employability
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Assessment, learning and employability
(SRHE and Open University Press imprint / general editor, Heather Eggins)
Society for Research into Higher Education & Open University Press, 2003
- : hard
- : pbk
Available at 9 libraries
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-
Library of Education, National Institute for Educational Policy Research
: hard378.1||253062100756
Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
What is assessed gets attention: what is not assessed does not. When higher education is expected to promote complex achievements in subject disciplines and in terms of 'employability', problems arise: how are such achievements to be assessed?
In the first part, Knight and Yorke argue that existing grading practices cannot cope with the expectations laid upon them, while the potential of formative assessment for the support of learning is not fully realised. Improving the effectiveness of assessment depends, they claim, on a well-grounded appreciation of what assessment is and what may and may not be expected of it. The second part is about summative judgements for high-stakes purposes. Using established measurement theory, a view is developed of the conditions under which affordable, useful, valid and reliable summative judgements can be made. A conclusion is that many complex achievements resist high-stakes assessment, which directs attention to low-stakes, essentially formative, alternatives. Assessment for learning and employability demands more than module-level changes to assessment methods. The final part discusses how institutions need to respond in policy terms to the challenges that have been posed.
This book has wide and practical relevance - to teachers, module and programme leaders, higher education managers and quality enhancement specialists.
Table of Contents
Preface
Higher education and employability
Summative assessment in disarray
Formative assessment
underexploited potential
Key themes in thinking about assessment
Diversifying assessment methods
Assessing for employability
Authenticity in assessment
Optimising the reliability of assessment
Making better use of formative assessment
Progression
Claimsmaking
Assessment systems in academic departments
Changing the institutional assessment system
Conclusions
References
Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"