e-Assessment for learning and performativity in higher education: A case for existential learning
Author(s) -
Jennifer Charteris,
Frances Quinn,
Mitchell Parkes,
Peter Fletcher,
Vicente Reyes
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
australasian journal of educational technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1449-5554
pISSN - 1449-3098
DOI - 10.14742/ajet.2595
Subject(s) - performativity , experiential learning , formative assessment , sociology , existentialism , pedagogy , agency (philosophy) , reflexivity , higher education , scholarship , epistemology , assessment for learning , social science , gender studies , philosophy , political science , law
This paper provides a critical and contextualised exploration of assessment for learning (AfL) as an important area of scholarship in higher education, particularly in online learning environments. Although AfL can speak to a range of education discourses, the specific focus here is on the performativity and experiential learning discourses around individual and collective notions of AfL in online settings (e-AfL). We argue that e-AfL practices that emphasise performativity and are used primarily for technicist purposes impoverish their potential to promote learning. We explore the existential notion that e-AfL can transcend formulaic and procedural interpretations of formative assessment in higher education. Rich, divergent approaches to e-AfL can support students in higher education courses to develop their funds of identity, thereby enhancing learner reflexivity and agency.
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