Evaluating student feedback literacies: a study using first-year business and economics students

被引:2
作者
Karunarathne, Wasana [1 ]
Selman, Chris [1 ]
Ryan, Tracii [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Melbourne, Dept Econ, Melbourne, Australia
[2] Univ Melbourne, Melbourne Ctr Study Higher Educ, Melbourne, Australia
关键词
Student feedback literacy; feedback uptake; learning improvements; first-year undergraduates; ENGAGEMENT; FEELINGS; EMOTIONS; MATTER; POWER;
D O I
10.1080/02602938.2023.2267803
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Feedback is a process in which students play a central role. To support this process, recent conceptual research suggests that students need to develop feedback literacies. However, additional empirical research is required to validate emergent frameworks of feedback literacy, including an investigation of the components of feedback literacy, their interconnections and their impact on students' learning. This study assessed students' level of feedback literacy and the interconnections between the theorised components of a framework developed by Carless and Boud. It also investigated the association between students' uptake of tutor feedback and their performance on a nested and authentic assessment task. Participants were N = 130 first-year Business and Economics undergraduate students. Data were obtained from these students through a self-report survey, analysis of changes made based on tutor feedback, and grade improvement on their final assessment. The results support interconnections between some of the components of the feedback literacy framework, and suggest a positive association between student feedback literacy and task performance. These findings not only strengthen understandings of feedback literacy theory, but also help educators identify which areas of student feedback literacy most need to be improved to enhance the effective use of feedback.
引用
收藏
页码:471 / 484
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
[11]   Using individual study profiles of first-year students in two different disciplines to predict graduation time [J].
Hailikari, Telle ;
Sund, Reijo ;
Haarala-Muhonen, Anne ;
Lindblom-Ylanne, Sari .
STUDIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2020, 45 (12) :2604-2618
[12]   A study of first-year chemistry students' understanding of solution concentration at the tertiary level [J].
de Berg, Kevin .
CHEMISTRY EDUCATION RESEARCH AND PRACTICE, 2012, 13 (01) :8-16
[13]   Predictors of positive development in first-year college students [J].
Brewer, Sarah E. ;
Nicotera, Nicole ;
Veeh, Chrisopher ;
Laser-Maira, Julie Anne .
JOURNAL OF AMERICAN COLLEGE HEALTH, 2018, 66 (08) :720-730
[14]   Persistence and engagement among first-year Hispanic students [J].
Luciano-Wong, Shaila ;
Crowe, Dale .
JOURNAL FOR MULTICULTURAL EDUCATION, 2019, 13 (02) :169-183
[15]   Patterns of success: first-year student success in multiple domains [J].
van der Zanden, Petrie J. A. C. ;
Denessen, Eddie ;
Cillessen, Antonius H. N. ;
Meijer, Paulien C. .
STUDIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2019, 44 (11) :2081-2095
[16]   Strengths use and deficit improvement of first-year university students: A structural model for social support and student outcomes [J].
Mostert, Karina ;
Du Toit, Charlize .
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGY IN AFRICA, 2023, 33 (04) :368-377
[17]   A Qualitative Study of Emotions Experienced by First-year Engineering Students during Programming Tasks [J].
Atiq, Zahra ;
Loui, Michael C. .
ACM TRANSACTIONS ON COMPUTING EDUCATION, 2022, 22 (03)
[18]   Gender differences in first-year college students' academic expectations [J].
Diniz, Antonio M. ;
Alfonso, Sonia ;
Araujo, Alexandra M. ;
Deano, Manuel ;
Costa, Alexandra R. ;
Conde, Angeles ;
Almeida, Leandro S. .
STUDIES IN HIGHER EDUCATION, 2018, 43 (04) :689-701
[19]   Attitudes and experiences among first-year regional Australian undergraduate students toward the study of chemistry [J].
Naiker, Mani ;
Wakeling, Lara ;
Johnson, Joel ;
Brown, Stephen .
JOURNAL OF UNIVERSITY TEACHING AND LEARNING PRACTICE, 2021, 18 (04)
[20]   "A Little Flip Goes a Long Way"-The Impact of a Flipped Classroom Design on Student Performance and Engagement in a First-Year Undergraduate Economics Classroom [J].
Singh, Nadia .
EDUCATION SCIENCES, 2020, 10 (11) :1-15