ABSTRACT

A key skill to be mastered by graduates today is the ability to assess the quality of their own work, and the work of others. This book demonstrates how the higher education system might move away from a culture of unhelpful grades and rigid marking schemes, to focus instead on forms of feedback and assessment that develop the critical skills of its students.

Tracing the historical and sociocultural development of evaluative judgement, and bringing together evidence and practice design from a range of disciplines, this book demystifies the concept of evaluative judgement and shows how it might be integrated and encouraged in a range of pedagogical contexts. Contributors develop various understandings of this often poorly understood concept and draw on their experience to showcase a toolbox of strategies including peer learning, self-regulated learning, self-assessment and the use of technologies.

A key text for those working with students in the higher education system, Developing Evaluative Judgement in Higher Education will give readers the knowledge and confidence required to promote these much-needed skills when working with individual students and groups.

chapter |4 pages

Introduction

What is evaluative judgement?

section 2|40 pages

Alternative theoretical perspectives on evaluative judgement

chapter 4|10 pages

Problematising standards

Representation or performance?

chapter 5|9 pages

Barriers to the cultivation of evaluative judgement

A critical and historical perspective

chapter 6|10 pages

Limits to evaluative judgement

section 3|66 pages

Approaches to developing evaluative judgement

chapter 8|9 pages

Developing evaluative judgement

A self-regulated learning perspective

chapter 10|9 pages

Exemplars, feedback and bias

How do computers make evaluative judgements?