How can flexible learning centres use social networking to improve their ongoing educational assessments?


Autoria(s): Brader, Andy
Data(s)

08/03/2010

Resumo

Most online assessment systems now incorporate social networking features, and recent developments in social media spaces include protocols that allow the synchronisation and aggregation of data across multiple user profiles. In light of these advances and the concomitant fear of data sharing in secondary school education this papers provides important research findings about generic features of online social networking, which educators can use to make sound and efficient assessments in collaboration with their students and colleagues. This paper reports on a design experiment in flexible educational settings that challenges the dichotomous legacy of success and failure evident in many assessment activities for at-risk youth. Combining social networking practices with the sociology of education the paper proposes that assessment activities are best understood as a negotiable field of exchange. In this design experiment students, peers and educators engage in explicit, "front-end" assessment (Wyatt-Smith, 2008) to translate digital artefacts into institutional, and potentiality economic capital without continually referring to paper based pre-set criteria. This approach invites students and educators to use social networking functions to assess “work in progress” and final submissions in collaboration, and in doing so assessors refine their evaluative expertise and negotiate the value of student’s work from which new criteria can emerge. The mobile advantages of web-based technologies aggregate, externalise and democratise this transparent assessment model for most, if not all, student work that can be digitally represented.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/31449/

Publicador

IATED Publications

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/31449/1/c31449.pdf

http://www.iated.org/inted2010/publications

Brader, Andy (2010) How can flexible learning centres use social networking to improve their ongoing educational assessments? In Proceedings of International Technology, Education and Development Conference 2010, IATED Publications, Hotel SH Valencia Palace, Valencia, Spain.

Direitos

Copyright 2010 Andy Brader

Fonte

Office of Education Research; Creative Industries Faculty; Institute for Creative Industries and Innovation

Palavras-Chave #200102 Communication Technology and Digital Media Studies #130303 Education Assessment and Evaluation #flexible learning #social networking #educational assessment
Tipo

Conference Paper