The effect of Skinny Cow Condition on first-year students’ expectations of assessment and feedback

Keywords: Assessment, Feedback, Self-directed learning, Higher education, First-year students

Abstract

De Beer and Gravett (2016: 46) sound the alarm that most first-year students who report for teacher training at tertiary institutions in South Africa emerge from an examination-driven system and are unable to engage with self-directed learning (SDL). This is disconcerting since students of the 21st century who enrol for university studies across the world are expected to be self-directed, taking responsibility for their own academic progress while focusing on active rather than passive learning (Nasri, 2017: 1). The English for Education course at the North-West University in South Africa requires students to be critically engaged as they direct their own learning. However, the high dropout rate (North-West University, 2018) of the first-year English for Education students (around 25% per annum over the last three years) and the average drop in their English marks from high school to university suggest that students find it difficult to adapt to the demands of tertiary studies. This paper reports on a study that focused on the teaching, learning and assessment gaps between secondary and tertiary education and which aimed at developing a framework to promote SDL in first-year English for Education studies. The findings illustrated that students felt frustrated by lecturer feedback on assignments that demanded active engagement and critical thinking. It became clear that students were unable to interpret feedback and that they felt unsupported if the lecturer did not show and tell them exactly what to write or would not supply them with detailed answers to memorise and reproduce.

Author Biographies

Marike Annandale, North-West University
Marike Annandale is a lecturer and the programme leader for the Senior and FET phase at the Faculty of Education at the North-West University. She teaches English for Education to the students who study via distance learning. Her research focus area is in self-directed learning with an emphasis on how this manifests in English language education and training at tertiary education institutions. She is a member of the research unit for self-directed learning at the Faculty of Education
Elizabeth Maryna Reyneke, North-West University
Maryna Reyneke is an associate professor and director of the School for Language Education at the Faculty of Education at the North-West University. She has vast experience of teaching and teacher training. Her research foci include multilingual pedagogies, English across the curriculum, assessment in education, and self-directed learning. She is a member of the research unit for self-directed learning at the Faculty of Education.
Published
2021-02-04
Section
Articles