1999
DOI: 10.1080/1353832990050202
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Fitness for Purpose in the Assessment of Learning: students as stakeholders

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Cited by 33 publications
(27 citation statements)
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“…Our approach to AfL is based both on an awareness of the varying conceptualisations and our empirical research into the student experience of assessment over a number of years (McDowell and Sambell 1999;Sambell and McDowell 1998;Sambell, McDowell, and Brown 1997). This research identified aspects of assessment that can support learning and should therefore be part of any comprehensive AfL model.…”
Section: Assessment For Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our approach to AfL is based both on an awareness of the varying conceptualisations and our empirical research into the student experience of assessment over a number of years (McDowell and Sambell 1999;Sambell and McDowell 1998;Sambell, McDowell, and Brown 1997). This research identified aspects of assessment that can support learning and should therefore be part of any comprehensive AfL model.…”
Section: Assessment For Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The latter group appears to have the main goal to achieve a pass mark, whereas the other group of 'active' students seems to be keen to learn from feedback in essence to feed-forward to the next module. McDowell and Sambell (1999) echo this idea when they refer to Entwistle's (1998) concept of extrinsic or intrinsically motivated students. Weaver (2006) cites Wojtas (1998) who laments that students are 'only interested in the mark', but Higgins et al (2002) identify a tension between being 'grade-sensitive' and being motivated by desire of achieving deep learning.…”
Section: Feedbackmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, McDowell and Sambell (1999) have found that students are very critical of conventional examinations that tend to test memory or poor learning and which are inappropriate means of assessing authentic knowledge and capabilities. Students do not want to invest their time and energies in activities that they consider to be meaningless.…”
Section: Assessment As a Tool For Managing Students' Experiencementioning
confidence: 97%
“…One of the means of securing quality in students' learning experience is ensuring that there are links between objectives, assessment and outcomes that are clear and justifiable (McDowell & Sambell, 1999). The fitness for purpose of assessment is determined by the capacity of the method employed to assess what it is intended to assess, or in other words by the capacity of the method to assess the purposes defined by the curriculum.…”
Section: Assessment As a Tool For Managing Students' Experiencementioning
confidence: 99%