Part I. Enabling Assessment Change.- 1 Scaling up Assessment for Learning: Progress and Prospects.- 2 Standards-Based Assessment for an Era of Increasing Transparency.- 3 Surfacing and Sharing Advances in Assessment: A Communities of Practice Approach.- 4 Inspiring Transformation through TESTA's Programme Approach.- Part II Assessment for Learning Strategies and Implementation.- 5 Making Assessment for Learning Happen through Assessment Task Design in the Law Curriculum.- 6 Clinical Assessment Judgements and 'Connoisseurship': Surfacing Curriculum-Wide Standards through Transdisciplinary Dialogue.- 7 The Use and Design of Rubrics to Support Assessment for Learning.- 8 Students' Experiences of Assessment for Learning.- Part III Feedback for Learning.- 9 Contextual Influences on Feedback Practices: An Ecological Perspective.- 10 Student Utilisation of Feedback: A Cyclical Model.- 11 Feelings about Feedback: The Role of Emotions in Assessment for Learning.- 12 Conditions and Effects of Feedback viewed through the Lens of the Interactive Tutoring Feedback Model.- Part IV Using Technology to Facilitate Assessment for Learning.- 13 Technology-Enhanced Assessment Feedback.- 14 How does Technology enable Scaling up Assessment for Learning?.
David Carless is Professor of Educational Assessment and
Associate Dean (Learning and Teaching) at the University of Hong
Kong’s Faculty of Education. His research is focused on
learning-oriented assessment and sustainable feedback in higher
education. His recent book, published by Routledge in 2015, is
entitled Excellence in University Assessment: Learning from
award-winning practice.
Susan Bridges is an associate professor and Assistant Dean
(Curriculum Innovation) with the Faculty of Education/Centre for
the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning, University of Hong Kong.
Her research interests are interactional and ethnographic,
exploring the ‘how’ of effective pedagogy in higher education. Her
most recent co-edited book, published by Springer in 2016, is
entitled Educational Technologies in Medical and Health Sciences
Education.
Cecilia Ka Yuk Chan is Head of Professional Development and
an associate professor at the University of Hong Kong’s
Centre for the Enhancement of Teaching and Learning at. She is an
expert in enhancing student learning, particularly in the area of
engineering, business and science education. Her research focuses
on the development, assessment and evidence of generic
skills.
Rick Glofcheski is a professor at the Faculty of Law,
University of Hong Kong, teaching and researching tort law and
labour law. His research interests include assessment for learning.
Rick’s teaching innovations have been recognized across the
university sector. He was selected twice for the University
Distinguished Teaching Award (2009 and 2015), and in 2011 he was
selected for the inaugural University Grants Committee Teaching
Award.
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