Abstract

Educational assessment has profound effects on the nature and depth of learning that students engage in. Typically there are two core types discussed within the pertinent literature; criterion and norm referenced assessment. However another form, ipsative assessment, refers to the comparison between current and previous performance within a course of learning. This paper gives an overview of an ipsative approach to assessment that serves to facilitate an opportunity for students to develop personal constructs of capability and to provide a capacity to track competence based gains both normatively and ipsatively. The study cohort (n = 128) consisted of undergraduate students in a Design and Communication Graphics module of an Initial Technology Teacher Education programme. Four consecutive design assignments were designed to elicit core graphical skills and knowledge. An adaptive comparative judgment method was employed to rank responses to each assignment which were subsequently analysed from an ipsative perspective. The paper highlights the potential of this approach in developing students’ epistemological understanding of graphical and technological education. Significantly, this approach demonstrates the capacity of ACJ to track performance over time and explores this relative to student ability levels in the context of conceptual design.

Highlights

  • The measurement of academic learning outcomes has become increasingly important in recent years (Coates 2014) resulting in an urgent need to develop instruments that enable the fair and valid assessment of student competencies (Zlatkin-Troitschanskaia et al 2015, 2016)

  • In an attempt to mediate many of the difficulties and concerns associated with educational assessment, and ipsative assessment, this study presents a synthesis of Adaptive Comparative Judgement (ACJ) with an ipsative style approach to assessment

  • Through the use of ACJ learners can become integrated into the assessment process, become self-regulating and be provided with an opportunity to develop constructs of capability through holistic judgement and peer analysis

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Summary

Introduction

The measurement of academic learning outcomes has become increasingly important in recent years (Coates 2014) resulting in an urgent need to develop instruments that enable the fair and valid assessment of student competencies (Zlatkin-Troitschanskaia et al 2015, 2016). The work of Nicol (2007) supports the view of actively integrating students into the assessment process through engagement with feedback. Nicol (2007) outlines the importance of active participation that supports engaging with diverse views on evidence of learning, and the benefit of evaluating and rehearsing internalised knowledge and understandings when reviewing and preparing feedback. The responsibility is placed on the learner to comprehend the qualities and standards associated with expected performance. This enables a self-regulatory capacity that is critical for learning (Zimmerman 1990). Together with the benefits of engaging with feedback and formative assessment, students must become inducted into the assessment practice (Sadler 2009)

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