What should feedback do?

What should feedback do?

By CJ Rauch


Outside of a formal learning environment, we have lots of tools and interactions that provide us with feedback on a daily basis. Think about each of the following. What information does each convey? In what ways are each of them useful (or not useful)? What can we do with the information they each provide?

  • A kitchen thermometer for cooking
  • Password reminder hints for logging in
  • A satellite navigation system for driving
  • A rejection letter for a job application
  • A pet’s reaction for attention

Clearly, certain pieces of information are actionable and useful in some contexts, but not in others: you wouldn’t take the temperature of your food with a satellite navigation system! In the classroom, we need to match the type and timing of feedback with the purpose and context in which it is experienced.

Effective feedback questions

The feedback we provide to students can provide the same sorts of information. Hattie and Timperley (2007) say that effective feedback addresses these three key points to learners:

  • Where am I going??(i.e. What are the goals?)
  • How am I doing??(i.e. What progress is being made toward the goal?)
  • Where to next??(i.e. What activities need to be undertaken to make better progress?)

In the same way that assessment ought to be driven by its purpose, so too should the feedback align with the purpose it seeks to serve. Does the purpose aim to increase the accuracy of a specific response from a learner, or does it seek to improve their approaches to such problems in the long term? Would allowing an incorrect response further the learner’s progress, or would allow for a future desirable difficulty?

These are just a few considerations about the purpose that teachers may face when deciding the nature of the feedback they provide. There is no single prescriptive formula you can use to decide exactly the type or timing of feedback. Instead, you will have to make a decision drawing from your knowledge of the evidence, your understanding of your students and the context, and your professional judgement.

Ultimately, however, it should communicate these three points to students, just like a car’s navigation system. This allows the learner to bring the information to the centre of their working memory, to understand their own understanding of the concept, and to consider the next steps to better encode the concept.

In our Assessment Essentials course, we dedicate a whole unit of learning to the power and potential of feedback. Try a free sample of the course here.

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Nicky Griffiths

Head of Primary Learning Support at Garden International School

3 个月

Does feedback align with the purpose it seeks to serve? A great thinking point and one to consider before making our feedback. The most useful feedback will empower learners of any age to consider the next steps in their learning.

David Coleman

Assistant Head @ Tall Oaks Academy | Literacy Specialist

4 个月

When it's broken down into these key points, it's essier to look at how to provide effective and meaningful feedback. Thanks!

Miranda Welch (formerly Barry) RDN/SDN/CertEd

Appreticeship team leader/Dental Tutor/assessor and IQA

4 个月

I love this and has been a very useful read for my own reflection on leaving feedback. And in turn I will changing the way my feedback is given. I think this is also a good tool to enable reflection from students, and help them as most struggle with reflecting. Even though is an everyday thing we do without realising.

Kasia Kozysa, MCCT

Experienced Educational Leader | Driving Curriculum Excellence, EDI Initiatives, and Sustainable Learning Practices

4 个月

Such an important piece of research. We can’t disregard the professional judgment and the bigger picture.

Fran Bussey

Leader of Education. Maths Specialist.

4 个月

Insightful

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