Enabling feedback seeking, agency and uptake through dialogic screencast feedback
Research output: Contribution to journal › Article › peer-review
Electronic versions
Documents
- DialogicScreencastFeedbackJamesMWood
Submitted manuscript, 1.31 MB, PDF document
Licence: Unspecified
- DialogicScreencastFeedbackJamesMWood
Accepted author manuscript, 1.18 MB, PDF document
DOI
Screencast feedback is higher in quantity, explicit and engaging and may better enable uptake compared to written feedback. However, most studies deploy screencast feedback as ‘transmission’ of feedback comments, positioning learners as passive and neglecting the importance of agency and action within the uptake process. This study attempts to overcome this limitation by conceptually positioning and deploying screencast feedback in a way that supports agency by providing technology-mediated opportunities for learners to request feedback and initiate uptake-oriented dialogues with providers. Taking a qualitative case approach, using written data, reflections (N = 14) and surveys (N = 14) to progressively focus interviews with 13 undergraduate advanced writing students in South Korea, three themes were developed. First, screencasts appeared to enhance understanding of feedback, helping learners understand standards and to set and achieve goals. Second, through initial feedback requests and opportunities to seek and clarify feedback, responding to feedback dialogically enabled learners to better understand and enact it, supporting their agency. Finally, the perception that the feedback was supportive and caring encouraged trust and motivation to engage with and use feedback. The findings have several theoretical and practical implications and are especially relevant to higher education practitioners wishing to support agency and uptake with a relational approach.
Keywords
- Agency, dialogic feedback, feedback uptake, relational pedagogies, socio-constructivism
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 464-484 |
Journal | Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education |
Volume | 48 |
Issue number | 4 |
Early online date | 22 Jun 2022 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - Jun 2023 |
Externally published | Yes |
Prof. activities and awards (1)
Improving feedback literacy through sustainable feedback engagement practices
Activity: Talk or presentation › Invited talk
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