Does Your Feedback Feed Forward?
Does Your Feedback Feed Forward?
feed forward?
Eddy White
JALT 2008
Tokyo Woman’s International Conference
on Language Teaching/Learning
Christian University Tokyo, Japan
2
Targets
• Feedback
background
• My feedback
research
• Your
feedback
practices
4
Targets
Feedback
background
5
• Feedback is information
about what was and was
not accomplished, given
a specific goal.
6
Feedback: summative vs formative
• Summative • Formative feedback -
feedback is a response to student work,
summary of students
final output or while it is in progress
performance, • - identifies strong and weak
includes a grade or aspects of performance,
score gives suggestions for
improvement
• It may help shape the
next performance or • - plays a part in ‘forming’ or
process, but it is too shaping student response to
late to play a part on the task being worked on
the task being • - aims to draw out students’
evaluated
best possible performance
7
Targets
Your
feedback
practices
8
Some key feedback questions
1. What do we say to students about
their work?
2. How do we say it?
3. Do they take any notice?
4. How much does it help their learning
payoff?
5. How well does it relate to students’
evidence of achievement of the
intended learning outcomes?
6. How efficient is it for us?
9
What
formative
feedback
practices
do you use
in your
courses?
11
discussion questions
1. What feedback practices do you
find to be effective in your
courses (i.e. that promote student
learning)?
2. What feedback-related problems
do you experience in the courses
that you teach?
12
Targets
Feedback
background
13
Quality feedback
16
Sadler (1989)
• Sadler
identified three
conditions
necessary for
students to
benefit from
feedback.
19
(Sadler, 1989)
20
Feedforward
• Providing useful information
to both the teacher and the
student that will help them
recognize where gaps in
student learning are and use
that data to move forward with
the intent of closing the gaps.
22
Feedforward
• -feedback that is “forward-
looking so that it can improve
students’ learning and enhance
their future performance on
assessed tasks.”
How Assessment Supports Learning, Carless et al. (2006,)
23
24
Targets
My
feedback
research
30
Teacher
written
feedback on
student
essays
31
Junior
Composition
- third-year
Academic
Writing class
33
essay cycle
34
35
essay topic:
slang
36
- attached to the
first essay draft
- uses same
criteria as the
summative
assessment for the
final draft
- a writing guide
for students
- a teaching tool
38
research focus
final draft
42
My research
concludes . . .
46
Conclusion
48
Feedforward
52
• Thank you
for your time
and attention
53
References
• Carless, D. (2006). Differing perceptions in the feedback process. Studies in Higher
Education, 31(2), 219-223.
• Gibbs, G. & Simpson, C. (2004-05). Conditions under which assessment supports learning.
Learning and Teaching in Higher Education, Issue 1, 3-29.
• Hattie, J., & Timperly, H. (2007). The power of feedback. Review of Educational
Research, 77(1), 81-112.
• Kluger, A. N., & DeNisi, A. (1996). The effects of feedback interventions on perfor-
• mance: A historical review, a meta-analysis, and a preliminary feedback interven-
• tion theory. Psychological Bulletin, 119(2), 254–284.
• Lee, G. & Schallert, D. (2008). Meeting in the margins: Effects of the teacher student
relationship on revision processes of EFL college students taking a composition course.
Journal of Second Language Writing, 17, 165-182.
• Pintrich, P.R., & DeGroot, E.V. (1990). Motivational and self-regulated learning
components of classroom academic performance. Journal of Educational Psychology, 82,
33-40.
• Raaheim, A. (2006). Do students profit from feedback? Seminar.net, Vol. 2, Issue 2
• Sadler, R. (1989). Formative Assessment and the Design of Instructional Systems.
Instructional Science,18, 119-144.
• Shute, V. (2008). Focus on formative feedback. Review of Educational Research, 78(1),
153-189.
• Wiggins, G. (1997). Feedback: How learning occurs. In: E. E. Chaffee (Ed.), Assessing
impact: Evidence and action (pp. 31–39). Washington, DC: American Association for
Higher Education.
• Wiggins, G. (2004) . Assessment as Feedback. New Horizons for Learning,
http::www.newhorizons.org.