Helping students learn through guidance and support.
Instructional feedback is a response, usually from a mentor, used to guide student learning. Feedback can take several forms including verbal, nonverbal, written and digital.
Feedback gives students direction and answers three questions (Hattie & Timperley, 2007):
When students are in the beginning stages of learning new concepts and skills, they may not yet have the ability to self-evaluate their performance. This makes expert feedback very important to help improve their understanding. While students may eventually discover solutions, guidance is often more effective and more motivating for learners (Kirschner, Sweller, and Clark, 2006).
Learning is more efficient and successful when students understand:
Educational research has shown that for students to learn teachers must engage their previous understanding, support the development of a conceptual framework of ideas (i.e., students lack authentic learning if they collect unconnected facts) and support metacognition for students to monitor their own learning (Bransford et al., 2000).
When students receive effective feedback, they can:
Feedback also has many benefits for instructors, including:
Faculty are often concerned with finding the time to give effective feedback. It is important to consider the act of providing feedback as an investment in creating more self-regulated learners. As students improve at reflecting on their own learning, they become better at self-evaluating and require less guidance. However, the quality of feedback is important when the desired goal is for students to strengthen their self-regulation skills.
Challenges can occur if poor feedback is given. For example, if feedback is:
(Carless, 2006; Hattie, 2012; Nuthall, 2007)
These concerns highlight the importance of needing to learn how to effectively provide feedback and should not be interpreted as reasons to avoid giving feedback.
Provide feedback that:
As instructors, it is necessary to communicate to your students why feedback is important. Consider sharing the following principles with your students:
(Hattie & Timperley, 2007; Poulos & Mahony, 2008; and Van der Kleij, Feskens & Eggen, 2015)
Feedback can be either Performance-Oriented or Mastery-Oriented (Dweck, 2016).
Performance-oriented | Mastery-oriented |
---|---|
Generally focused on:
| Generally focused on:
|
While both types of feedback focus on student outcomes, mastery-oriented feedback helps students improve, focusing on how to better understand a concept or develop a skill. Students will benefit more when feedback is mastery-oriented.
It is important that instructors are clear with students about the level of feedback that they are providing. This ensures that feedback has the intended effect and makes students aware that there may be other levels of feedback from which they may benefit, depending on the task.
(Hattie & Timperley, 2007)
The types of feedback, their specific goals and levels of focus apply to all delivery modes and learning environments. There are additional feedback types you can consider if you are teaching an online course.
The following examples are ways to incorporate feedback into online learning.
Feature | Description |
---|---|
Inline Grading | Digital notes or comments added to essays and other assignments to help students revise |
Audio | Voice recording that gives verbal, direct and specific feedback to students’ work |
Formative Assessments | Polls or journals to help the instructor to assess student learning |
Peer Review | Discussion board in which students review one another’s work |
Rubrics | Online scoring guide to help students assess their learning |
Self-Assessment | Self-assessment in which students review their individual work |
Summative Assessments | Blog, portfolio or project that helps the instructor assess student learning |
Video | Video recording that gives verbal, direct and specific feedback to students’ work |
Many educational technology tools help faculty provide feedback more efficiently, particularly in a hybrid and online course.
Audio and video recordings allow students to listen and/or watch their instructor give feedback. Having additional cues and context can help students avoid misinterpreting the feedback. These formats of feedback can be created using Panopto and integrated alongside the annotation tool in UB Learns.
Discussion boards are a great way to provide students with both peer and faculty feedback. Keeping a regular presence throughout online classes supports student learning.
When using learning management systems such as UB Learns, instructors can create rubrics in their course and attach them directly to assignments. Once the rubric is added to an assignment it becomes interactive allowing grading to be done efficiently and given to students promptly.
The LMS Support site help site contains information on rubrics, such as how to create them, how to associate them with gradable content and how to share them with your students.
Assess progress during learning to adjust and improve instruction while gathering evidence about students’ level of understanding. In UB Learns, you can provide student feedback using tools such as quizzes, polls and journals.
With the Blackboard annotate tool in UB Learns it is possible to give feedback and annotate student work directly. For example, add , to students’ essays and assignments to help them revise their work.
UB Learns can automatically grade students’ multiple-choice quizzes or comprehension questions. It also offers a variety of question types such as fill-in-the-blank, matching and ordering.
Having students give feedback to themselves and their peers can help alleviate the amount of time it takes the instructor to give feedback. It also allows students the chance to think critically about the quality of work being evaluated. This has both benefits and drawbacks if not done carefully:
Benefits
Drawbacks
Best Practices
Summative assessments help you evaluate the levels of students’ achievement after the completion of learning activities.
After reviewing the activities and assessments in your course, complete the following items:
Strategies to help students succeed in learning by incorporating effective feedback methods.
Grant Wiggins’ answers this question: What is true feedback—and how can it improve learning?
Tips to guide the choices that affect the effectiveness of feedback - Timing, amount, mode audience, and content.
Learn how your students can help you improve your instruction and course design.
Strategies to integrate into your course to help you redesign with your students in mind.
Bill Gates highlights the need for American teachers to receive real feedback on their teaching that goes beyond a label of “satisfactory” to improve their teaching practice.
Blog post presenting research, methods, and tips for providing audio-recorded feedback to students in online classes to increase engagement with students and improve learning outcomes.