Marking parties for marking written assessments: a spontaneous community of practice
Marking parties for marking written assessments: a spontaneous community of practice
In programmes of assessment with both high and low-stakes assessments, the inclusion of open-ended long answer questions in the high-stakes examination can contribute to driving deeper learning among students. However, in larger institutions, this would generate a seemingly insurmountable marking workload. In this study, we use a focused ethnographic approach to explore how such a marking endeavour can be tackled efficiently and pragmatically. In marking parties, examiners come together to individually mark student papers. This study focuses on marking parties for two separate tasks assessing written clinical communication in medical school finals at Southampton, UK. Data collected included field notes from 21.3 h of marking parties, details of demographics and clinical and educational experience of examiners, examiners' written answers to an open-ended post-marking party questionnaire, an in-depth interview and details of the actual marks assigned during the marking parties. In a landscape of examiners who are busy clinicians and rarely interact with each other educationally, marking parties represent a spontaneous and sustainable community of practice, with functions extending beyond the mere marking of exams. These include benchmarking, learning, managing biases and exam development. Despite the intensity of the work, marking parties built camaraderie and were considered fun and motivating.
Assessment, staff development, undergraduate phase of education, written assessment
Vaccari, Emma
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Moonen-van Loon, Joyce
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Van der Vleuten, Cees
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Hunt, Paula
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McManus, Bruce
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Vaccari, Emma
88ebe887-55fb-404f-a6ca-ceb9795ab823
Moonen-van Loon, Joyce
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Van der Vleuten, Cees
d4567760-53c2-48f9-a868-93a4061d4163
Hunt, Paula
13954c53-0e66-418c-a8c5-35d897067560
McManus, Bruce
658cedfa-d30f-4c66-b2fb-d7dbb86e519d
Vaccari, Emma, Moonen-van Loon, Joyce, Van der Vleuten, Cees, Hunt, Paula and McManus, Bruce
(2023)
Marking parties for marking written assessments: a spontaneous community of practice.
Medical Teacher.
(doi:10.1080/0142159X.2023.2262102).
Abstract
In programmes of assessment with both high and low-stakes assessments, the inclusion of open-ended long answer questions in the high-stakes examination can contribute to driving deeper learning among students. However, in larger institutions, this would generate a seemingly insurmountable marking workload. In this study, we use a focused ethnographic approach to explore how such a marking endeavour can be tackled efficiently and pragmatically. In marking parties, examiners come together to individually mark student papers. This study focuses on marking parties for two separate tasks assessing written clinical communication in medical school finals at Southampton, UK. Data collected included field notes from 21.3 h of marking parties, details of demographics and clinical and educational experience of examiners, examiners' written answers to an open-ended post-marking party questionnaire, an in-depth interview and details of the actual marks assigned during the marking parties. In a landscape of examiners who are busy clinicians and rarely interact with each other educationally, marking parties represent a spontaneous and sustainable community of practice, with functions extending beyond the mere marking of exams. These include benchmarking, learning, managing biases and exam development. Despite the intensity of the work, marking parties built camaraderie and were considered fun and motivating.
Text
marking parties author accepted manuscript
- Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 2023
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 October 2023
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Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
Keywords:
Assessment, staff development, undergraduate phase of education, written assessment
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 485596
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/485596
ISSN: 0142-159X
PURE UUID: 1673a3d4-4f8c-4c08-a0a1-a7e68eafb4f3
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Date deposited: 12 Dec 2023 17:32
Last modified: 02 Oct 2024 04:01
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Contributors
Author:
Emma Vaccari
Author:
Joyce Moonen-van Loon
Author:
Cees Van der Vleuten
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