Engagement with Optional Formative Feedback in a Portfolio-Based Digital Design Module
Abstract
:1. Introduction
RQ1. Does the use of formative feedback on assessment tasks help students improve their performance in summative assessments?RQ2. How does content engagement differ between students who get formative feedback and those who do not?RQ3. What student characteristics are associated with seeking formative feedback?RQ4. How useful do students find formative feedback in relation to the learning objectives of a digital design module? Does this kind of feedback change their attitudes to learning?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Formative Assessment and Feedback
2.2. Leveraging Learning Analytics to Enhance Formative Assessment and Feedback in Computer Science Education
3. Materials and Methods
3.1. General Procedure
3.2. Educational Context/Course Unit
- (1)
- Conduct professional quality stakeholder, context and competitor research using industry-standard methodologies.
- (2)
- Identify and develop creative solutions to a design problem and iterate and select among them for prototyping.
- (3)
- Identify good practices in a particular programming language and use this to implement key features for mobile, web or other digital interfaces.
- (a)
- The module information which includes information about the module aims, the learning outcomes, and the technologies that are utilised in the context of the module;
- (b)
- The learning materials which contain the weekly lecture notes, the pre-recorded lectures, the tutorial notes, and the tutorial activities that students had to complete on a weekly basis;
- (c)
- The reading list which includes various resources for the students (books, journal articles);
- (d)
- The assessment requirements/criteria which include the assignment specification/criteria for each task.
3.3. Sample
3.4. Measures and Data Analysis
4. Results
- “I will enjoy this module”
- “The formative assessment tasks will be highly effective for my learning”
- “Communication with the instructor will be very frequent”
- “I will be able to identify my strengths and weaknesses within my own work”
- “I will collaborate with others to complete some of the tasks”
- “Formative assessment tasks will help me know how well I am doing”
- “I will be a more independent learner”
- “I will develop my writing skills and my approach to writing coursework as a result of the module”
- “I will adjust my work regularly as I go along”
- “I will stick to my original plan”
- “I will produce an end result which I am proud of”
“feedback helped me to understand what the assessment is asking to do to meet the learning outcomes”;
“The good thing is that I had formative feedback on my tasks for this module, in which I was very happy as I could improve the tasks that went wrong or something was missing”.
“I think using rubrics is more straightforward”.
“Actually, the feedback received has been mentioning comments that were in the rubric and marking criteria. It is more useful if the feedback comes from the marking criteria as this is what the marker sees when marking the assessment”.
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
7. Limitations and Future Work
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Portfolio-Assessment | Release Time | Description of What Students Are Required for Each Task. | Submission Deadline | Feedback (One Week after Submitted) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Task 1 (Empathise) 25% | Beginning of week 1 | Create a mood board containing representative photos, colours, fonts, and reference designs using Figma and provide a description of the process of creating the mood board. | End of week 2 | Beginning of week 3 |
Task 2 (Define) 25% | Beginning of week 3 | Define the User Experience (UX) mapping, define a persona and an associated scenario represented as a design map and describe this process. | End of week 4 | Beginning of week 5 |
Task 3 (Ideate) 25% | Beginning of week 5 | Capture their user interface as a wireframe and provide an analysis of the Information Architecture of the wireframe(s) containing Organisation, Labelling, Navigation, and Search. It also required them to include a blueprint diagram representing the organisational hierarchy to indicate flow between screens and describe this process. | End of week 6 | Beginning of week 7 |
Task 4 (Prototype) 25% | Beginning of week 7 | Construct an interactive functional prototype of their app. This would be one or more static web pages that run in the browser, created using HTML and CSS. Students also had to provide a walkthrough of the scenario and a description of the CSS styling used | End of week 8 | Beginning of week 9 |
Task 1 (14 Out of 25) | Task 2 (17 Out of 25) | Task 3 (15 Out of 25) | Task 4 (17 Out of 25) |
---|---|---|---|
“Good introduction. Good choice of collage images but more explanation on the choices is needed. Good research and choice of colours, but you could say more about them i.e., what personality/energy do they express? which are the base/accent/neutral colours? Some background research for the font selection would be beneficial. Good set of reference designs and reasons for selecting them.” | “Persona defined and explanation on goals and frustration of the user provided. Scenario describes solutions to the persona’s needs and includes the points that the user interacts with the app.” | “Good grid stylist and good use of wire flow. Good analysis and good blueprint. However, navigation, labelling, search etc. could be further discussed.” | “You Describe the prototype more from a technical perspective. It would be good to return to the user scenario and describe how this plays out. Good work using the Open Data to extract data, this is what a functional app have to do. You are way over your word count but your description of the task is very good.” |
Task No | Description | Improvement (%) | N |
---|---|---|---|
1 | Empathise | 15 | 17 |
2 | Define | 14 | 20 |
3 | Ideate | 11 | 15 |
4 | Prototype | 18 | 6 |
Tasks Completed | Overall Improvement (%) | N |
---|---|---|
1 | 4.7 | 3 |
2 | 8 | 7 |
3 | 9.8 | 7 |
4 | 13.6 | 5 |
Characteristic | Beta | 95% CI * | p | VIF ** |
---|---|---|---|---|
Learning Materials | 0.01 | −0.01, 0.04 | 0.3 | 2.4 |
Assessments | 0.01 | 0.00, 0.02 | 0.015 | 1.4 |
Reading List | −0.01 | −0.07, 0.04 | 0.6 | 2.2 |
Module Information | 0.03 | −0.07, 0.01 | 0.13 | 1.1 |
Engaged Weeks | 0 | −0.02, 0.01 | >0.9 | 1.2 |
Characteristic | Beta | 95% CI * | p | VIF ** |
---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | 0.68 | −0.27, 1.6 | 0.2 | 1.1 |
Intrinsic | −0.05 | −0.18, 0.07 | 0.4 | 2.7 |
Identified regulation | −0.22 | −0.37, −0.08 | 0.006 | 2.4 |
External regulation | 0.13 | 0.05, 0.21 | 0.003 | 1.5 |
Amotivation | −0.03 | −0.09, 0.02 | 0.2 | 1.5 |
Agreeableness | 0.05 | −0.13, 0.22 | 0.6 | 1.2 |
Extroversion | 0.06 | −0.15, 0.27 | 0.6 | 1.3 |
Openness | 0.03 | −0.19, 0.26 | 0.8 | 1.9 |
Conscientiousness | −0.35 | −0.56, −0.15 | 0.003 | 1.4 |
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Kalaitzopoulou, E.; Matthews, P.; Mystakidis, S.; Christopoulos, A. Engagement with Optional Formative Feedback in a Portfolio-Based Digital Design Module. Information 2023, 14, 287. https://doi.org/10.3390/info14050287
Kalaitzopoulou E, Matthews P, Mystakidis S, Christopoulos A. Engagement with Optional Formative Feedback in a Portfolio-Based Digital Design Module. Information. 2023; 14(5):287. https://doi.org/10.3390/info14050287
Chicago/Turabian StyleKalaitzopoulou, Eirini, Paul Matthews, Stylianos Mystakidis, and Athanasios Christopoulos. 2023. "Engagement with Optional Formative Feedback in a Portfolio-Based Digital Design Module" Information 14, no. 5: 287. https://doi.org/10.3390/info14050287
APA StyleKalaitzopoulou, E., Matthews, P., Mystakidis, S., & Christopoulos, A. (2023). Engagement with Optional Formative Feedback in a Portfolio-Based Digital Design Module. Information, 14(5), 287. https://doi.org/10.3390/info14050287