Strategic and well-planned use of feedback in the assessment process is key to promoting learning. This paper evaluates the role a two-stage test process played in guiding and assisting student learning in a second-year module at the University of KwaZulu-Natal, South Africa. Having been provided with verbal and written feedback without grades from the first test, students were given the opportunity to write a different, second test, and each was required to choose which one was graded. Students were generally very positive about the assessment process, most participated willingly and fully, many learned differently for the second test, and there was evidence of meta-cognitive awareness and understanding. Despite this, a number of students experienced difficulty and frustration in judging the quality of their work. The discussion focuses on process and learning issues, on the utility of feedback and on formative test assessment procedures.
Approaches to assessmentBased on behaviorist educational theories which assume learning and behavior can be accurately determined and brought about in a rational way, assessment in institutions of higher learning has traditionally been geared towards testing whether students have achieved a set of pre-determined goals. The focus therefore tended to be content and product oriented, giving rise to summative, examinations-driven and norm-referenced assessment approaches. Since it is well recognized that assessment is one of the major factors that influences students' approach to learning in formal educational settings