Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6841705 International Journal of Educational Research 2008 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
The research reveals the distinction between the social processes involved in the teaching and learning process, on one hand, and the rules and procedures shaping the assessment process on the other. During the course of the first year the two processes continuously distinguished themselves from each other, leaving failing students in an individualised situation. Students struggled hard to manage all the assignments encountered, narrowing their focus on most immediate events that lay ahead. This approach often eventually failed and so students dropped chosen parts of the assessment system in order to manage the situation. Teachers' aspirations and the intentions underlying the assessment system became thwarted, but both students and teachers placed responsibility for failures on the individual student. The assessment process as an emergent phenomenon thus shows a traditional elite character.
Related Topics
Social Sciences and Humanities Social Sciences Education
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