Abstract

Feedback literacy is an important graduate attribute that supports students’ future work capacities. This study aimed to develop a framework through which discipline-specific feedback literacies, as a set of socially situated skills, can be developed within core curricula. The framework is developed through a content analysis of National Qualifications Frameworks from six countries and UK Subject Benchmark Statements for multiple disciplines, analysis of indicative subject content for a range of disciplines and consultation with subject-matter experts. Whilst most of the benchmark statements incorporate the development of feedback literacy skills related to ‘making judgements’, attributes relating to ‘appreciating feedback’ and ‘taking action based on feedback’ are less prevalent. Skills related to ‘managing the affective challenges of feedback’ are most prevalent in documentation for applied disciplines. The resulting empirically guided curriculum design framework showcases how integrating the development of discipline-specific feedback literacies can be enacted through authentic learning activities and assessment tasks. In terms of implications for practice, the framework represents in concrete terms how discipline-specific feedback literacies can be integrated within higher education curricula. The findings also have implications for policy: by positioning discipline-specific feedback literacies as graduate outcomes, we believe they should be integrated within national qualifications frameworks as crucial skills to be developed through higher education courses. Finally, from a theoretical perspective, we advance conceptions of feedback literacy through a sociocultural approach and propose new directions for research that seek to reconceptualise a singular concept of feedback literacy as multiple feedback literacies that unfold in distinctive ways across disciplines.

Highlights

  • A central aim of higher education is to prepare students for life beyond university

  • We offer two novel contributions to the literature on feedback literacy: (1) we present a critical exploration of the positioning of feedback literacy as a key graduate outcome, and (2) we introduce the concept of discipline-specific feedback literacies, presenting an empirically guided curriculum design framework for their development

  • We develop our framework for embedding the development of discipline-specific feedback literacies in curriculum design through a content analysis of international documentation and consultation with subject-matter experts, seeking to address the following research issues: (a) the extent to which feedback literacy is recognised as an important graduate outcome in National Qualifications Frameworks (NQFs), and the extent to which this varies across disciplinelevel guidelines; (b) the opportunities to embed the development of discipline-specific feedback literacies within core curricula

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Summary

Introduction

A central aim of higher education is to prepare students for life beyond university To this end, identifying key graduate attributes or outcomes is an important endeavour. An important set of skills for success in the workplace is the capacity to seek, generate and use feedback information effectively, and to engage in feedback processes to support ongoing personal and professional development. These are not just academic skills but lifelong learning skills that support development in professional, personal, recreational and educational contexts. Productive feedback processes can be seen as co-constructed between participants in exchanges shaped by established disciplinary tools and conventions (Esterhazy 2018)

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