Author(s)
Brown, James Brown.Keywords
Accounting students, feedback, assignments, transparency, module learning outcomes378 Higher education
LB2300 Higher Education
Education
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http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/324059Abstract
The usefulness of the feedback received on assessments undertaken by accounting students during their degree programme is an area about which little has been written. Given the increasing significance of transparency in the academic process, as evidenced through the development of explicit programme and module learning outcomes, it seems anomalous that research into the student perception of the benefit they receive from assessment feedback to help them achieve those outcomes is virtually non‐existent. This study investigates student views on the usefulness of feedback through a semi‐structured interview approach with 20 students across differing academic levels. The study principally finds that: although students are generally content with the feedback they receive, they have concerns over the consistency between the comments and the mark; there is general discontent at the lack of feedback from examinations; there is evidence that the desire for feedback is, in part, a function of student expectation of mark/grade.Type
Journal ArticleIdentifier
oai:napier-surface.worktribe.com:324059http://researchrepository.napier.ac.uk/Output/324059