| Literature DB >> 31664546 |
Suzanne Schut1,2, Jan van Tartwijk3, Erik Driessen4,5, Cees van der Vleuten4,5, Sylvia Heeneman4,6.
Abstract
Low-stakes assessments are theorised to stimulate and support self-regulated learning. They are feedback-, not decision-oriented, and should hold little consequences to a learner based on their performance. The use of low-stakes assessment as a learning opportunity requires an environment in which continuous improvement is encouraged. This may be hindered by learners' perceptions of assessment as high-stakes. Teachers play a key role in learners' assessment perceptions. By investigating assessment perceptions through an interpersonal theory-based perspective of teacher-learner relationships, we aim to better understand the mechanisms explaining the relationship between assessment and learning within medical education. First, twenty-six purposefully selected learners, ranging from undergraduates to postgraduates in five different settings of programmatic assessment, were interviewed about their assessment task perception. Next, we conducted a focussed analysis using sensitising concepts from interpersonal theory to elucidate the influence of the teacher-learner relationship on learners' assessment perceptions. The study showed a strong relation between learners' perceptions of the teacher-learner relationship and their assessment task perception. Two important sources for the perception of teachers' agency emerged from the data: positional agency and expert agency. Together with teacher's communion level, both types of teachers' agency are important for understanding learners' assessment perceptions. High levels of teacher communion had a positive impact on the perception of assessment for learning, in particular in relations in which teachers' agency was less dominantly exercised. When teachers exercised these sources of agency dominantly, learners felt inferior to their teachers, which could hinder the learning opportunity. To utilise the learning potential of low-stakes assessment, teachers are required to stimulate learner agency in safe and trusting assessment relationships, while carefully considering the influence of their own agency on learners' assessment perceptions. Interpersonal theory offers a useful lens for understanding assessment relationships. The Interpersonal Circumplex provides opportunities for faculty development that help teachers develop positive and productive relationships with learners in which the potential of low-stakes assessments for self-regulated learning is realised.Entities:
Keywords: Assessment for learning; Faculty development; Low-stake assessments; Teacher–learner relationships
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31664546 PMCID: PMC7210223 DOI: 10.1007/s10459-019-09935-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Health Sci Educ Theory Pract ISSN: 1382-4996 Impact factor: 3.853
Fig. 1The interpersonal circumplex (e.g. Gurtman 2009; Wiggins 1996)
Participants’ characteristics
| Characteristics | N=26 | |
|---|---|---|
| A1 | Year 1 & 2 of the 5-year graduate entry programme Physician-Clinical Investigator at Cleveland Clinical Lerner College of Medicine of CWRU, Ohio, USA | 5 |
| A2 | Year 2 of the 4-year graduate-entry programme Physician-Clinical Investigator at the Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Science, Maastricht University, the Netherlands | 6 |
| B1 | The 12 weeks clinical rotation Family Medicine during the undergraduate programme Medicine at Faculty of Health, Medicine and Life Science, Maastricht University, the Netherlands | 4 |
| C1 | Year 2 of the 2-year Family Medicine residency programme at Dalhousie University Department of Family Medicine, Canada | 6 |
| C2 | End year 1 and 3 of the 3-year family Medicine residency programme at Maastricht University Medical Centre, Maastricht | 5 |
| Preclinical training | 11 | |
| Clinical training | 15 | |
| Female | 18 | |
| Male | 8 | |