Journal article
What Is My Next Step? School Students' Perceptions of Feedback
C Brooks, Y Huang, J Hattie, A Carroll, R Burton
Frontiers in Education | FRONTIERS MEDIA SA | Published : 2019
Abstract
Feedback literature is dominated by claims of large effect sizes, yet there are remarkable levels of variability relating to the effects of feedback. The same feedback can be effective for one student but not another, and in one situation but not another. There is a need to better understand how students are receiving feedback and currently there is relatively little research on school students' perceptions of feedback. In contrast, current social constructivist and self-regulatory models of feedback see the learner as an active agent in receiving, interpreting, and applying feedback information. This paper aims to investigate school student perceptions of feedback through designing a studen..
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Awarded by Australian Government
Funding Acknowledgements
This research was funded by the Australian Government through the Australian Research Council (LP160101604).