To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations

The issue of whether trainee teachers in the post-16 sector should have their classroom practice graded has been debated for a number of years. The case for training courses retaining an emphasis on written and verbal ‘developmental’ feedback at the expense of ‘judgements’ appears to be lost. This a...

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Main Authors: Matthews, Richard, Noyes, Andrew
Format: Article
Published: Taylor & Francis 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32027/
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author Matthews, Richard
Noyes, Andrew
author_facet Matthews, Richard
Noyes, Andrew
author_sort Matthews, Richard
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description The issue of whether trainee teachers in the post-16 sector should have their classroom practice graded has been debated for a number of years. The case for training courses retaining an emphasis on written and verbal ‘developmental’ feedback at the expense of ‘judgements’ appears to be lost. This article is set within the context of an ever-growing culture of performativity in English further education colleges, where grading is regarded as an essential requirement to ensure high quality teaching. Tensions are explored between stakeholders who call for graded observations of trainees’ classroom performance (e.g. Ofsted and FEC quality assurance managers), and classroom-based trainers and researchers who argue that grading is too judgemental and compromises the formative and developmental progress of trainees. The rationale for trainee teachers to have their classroom practice graded is contrasted with evidence that highlights the negative results of grading. This article reports findings from the evaluation of an innovative, alternative strategy that addresses Ofsted’s central requirement for trainees to know ‘where they are’ in their development by offering a middle way between grading and not grading trainees’ classroom performance.
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spelling nottingham-320272020-05-04T20:05:27Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32027/ To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations Matthews, Richard Noyes, Andrew The issue of whether trainee teachers in the post-16 sector should have their classroom practice graded has been debated for a number of years. The case for training courses retaining an emphasis on written and verbal ‘developmental’ feedback at the expense of ‘judgements’ appears to be lost. This article is set within the context of an ever-growing culture of performativity in English further education colleges, where grading is regarded as an essential requirement to ensure high quality teaching. Tensions are explored between stakeholders who call for graded observations of trainees’ classroom performance (e.g. Ofsted and FEC quality assurance managers), and classroom-based trainers and researchers who argue that grading is too judgemental and compromises the formative and developmental progress of trainees. The rationale for trainee teachers to have their classroom practice graded is contrasted with evidence that highlights the negative results of grading. This article reports findings from the evaluation of an innovative, alternative strategy that addresses Ofsted’s central requirement for trainees to know ‘where they are’ in their development by offering a middle way between grading and not grading trainees’ classroom performance. Taylor & Francis 2016 Article PeerReviewed Matthews, Richard and Noyes, Andrew (2016) To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations. Journal of Further and Higher Education, 40 (2). pp. 247-261. ISSN 1469-9486 post-16 teacher training Ofsted quality assurance http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/0309877X.2014.953456 doi:10.1080/0309877X.2014.953456 doi:10.1080/0309877X.2014.953456
spellingShingle post-16 teacher training
Ofsted
quality assurance
Matthews, Richard
Noyes, Andrew
To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations
title To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations
title_full To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations
title_fullStr To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations
title_full_unstemmed To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations
title_short To grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations
title_sort to grade or not to grade: balancing formative and summative assessment in post-16 teacher trainee observations
topic post-16 teacher training
Ofsted
quality assurance
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32027/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32027/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/32027/