Improving criteria and feedback in student assessment in law


Autoria(s): Johnstone, Richard; Patterson, Jennifer; Rubenstein, Kim
Data(s)

1996

Resumo

Spurred on by both the 1987 Pearce Report1 and the general changes to higher education spawned by the “Dawkins revolution” from 1988, there has been much critical self-evaluation leading to profound improvements to the quality of teaching in Australian law schools.2 Despite the changes there are still areas of general law teaching practice which have lagged behind recent developments in our understanding of what constitutes high quality teaching. One such area is assessment criteria and feedback. The project Improving Feedback in Student Assessment in Law is an attempt to remedy this. It aims to produce a manual containing key principles for the design of assessment and the provision of feedback, with practical yet flexible ideas and illustrations which law teachers may adopt or modify. Most of the examples have been developed by teachers at the University of Melbourne Law School. The project was supported in 1996 by a Committee for the Advancement of University Teaching grant and the manual will be published late in 1997.3 This note summarises the core principles which are elaborated further in the manual.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/78184/

Publicador

Australasian Law Teachers Association

Relação

http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/journals/LegEdRev/1996/11.html

Johnstone, Richard, Patterson, Jennifer, & Rubenstein, Kim (1996) Improving criteria and feedback in student assessment in law. Legal Education Review, 11(7(2)).

Direitos

Copyright 1996 Australasian Law Teachers Association

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Law

Palavras-Chave #Law -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- Australia. #Curriculum-based assessment -- Australia.
Tipo

Journal Article