Abstract

This article reports on a study that was carried out in autumn 2007 with students in a professional nurse education distance course at a Swedish university. The study aimed to develop a greater understanding of the student-teacher relationship based on research questions addressing the teachers’ role, the learning process, and the assessment process in traditional approaches to teaching and learning. A didactical design was adopted, focusing on three learning outcomes in three phases. In each of the three phases, these learning outcomes were assessed by each student documenting his/her knowledge at the beginning, middle, and end of the course. Data was collected via in-depth interviews with students (n = 14) and through a questionnaire (n = 40) and was analysed using an inductive thematic analysis of the material. The results indicate a student-teacher relationship involving ambiguity and complexity in relation to the degree of teacher direction as being teacher-centred or learner-centred and also in relation to the learning process as being reproductive or productive. The interpretation of the results shows diverse aspects of the student-teacher relationship arising from students’ beliefs about teaching, learning, and assessment and, in particular, process-based assessment. The locus of control involves the teachers’ role, the learning process, and the assessment process, which illuminates different perspectives of power relations in the student-teacher relationship.

Highlights

  • Background to the StudyStudents can access education today without leaving their hometown and family, making it easier to increase the overall level of education of citizens in society

  • This paper reports on a study that aims to understand the student-teacher relationship in the context of process-based assessment for learning (Black & Wiliam, 1998)

  • The notion of process-based assessment is understood from cycles of reflections and formative assessment

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Summary

Introduction

Background to the StudyStudents can access education today without leaving their hometown and family, making it easier to increase the overall level of education of citizens in society. The goals of the fifth key competency, learning to learn, are to make the learner aware of his/her learning process, to develop the learner’s skills to solve problems in the learning situation, and to build on the learner’s existing knowledge, gained from other educational experiences at work or in everyday life. Both in face-to-face learning and distance education, there are perspectives of control in the student-teacher relationship. The research questions addressed students’ expectations and beliefs in relation to teaching and learning:

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