Integrating learners into the assessment process using adaptive comparative judgement with an ipsative approach of identifying competence based gains relative to student ability levels.
Date
2018Author
Seery, Niall
Buckley, Jeffrey
Delahunty, Thomas
Canty, Donal
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Educational assessment has profound effects on the nature and depth of learning that students
engage in. Typically there are two core types discussed within the pertinent literature;
criterion and norm referenced assessment. However another form, ipsative assessment,
refers to the comparison between current and previous performance within a course
of learning. This paper gives an overview of an ipsative approach to assessment that serves
to facilitate an opportunity for students to develop personal constructs of capability and to
provide a capacity to track competence based gains both normatively and ipsatively. The
study cohort (n = 128) consisted of undergraduate students in a Design and Communication
Graphics module of an Initial Technology Teacher Education programme. Four consecutive
design assignments were designed to elicit core graphical skills and knowledge.
An adaptive comparative judgment method was employed to rank responses to each assignment
which were subsequently analysed from an ipsative perspective. The paper highlights
the potential of this approach in developing students’ epistemological understanding of
graphical and technological education. Significantly, this approach demonstrates the capacity
of ACJ to track performance over time and explores this relative to student ability levels
in the context of conceptual design.
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