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Students’ perceptions about evaluation and assessment in higher education: a review

764

Citations

50

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2005

Year

Abstract

Abstract In educational contexts, understanding the student’s learning must take account of the student’s construction of reality. Reality as experienced by the student has an important additional value. This assumption also applies to a student’s perception of evaluation and assessment. Students’ study behaviour is not only determined by the examination or assessment modes that are used. Students’ perceptions about evaluation methods also play a significant role. This review aims to examine evaluation and assessment from the student’s point of view. Research findings reveal that students’ perceptions about assessment significantly influence their approaches to learning and studying. Conversely, students’ approaches to study influence the ways in which they perceive evaluation and assessment. Findings suggest that students hold strong views about different assessment and evaluation formats. In this respect students favour multiple‐choice format exams to essay type questions. However, when compared with more innovative assessment methods, students call the ‘fairness’ of these well‐known evaluation modes into question. Notes This paper is derived from a presentation at the joint Northumbria/Earli SIG Assessment and Evaluation Conference: learning communities and assessment cultures, held at the University of Northumbria at Newcastle in August 2002.

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