2010-12-01
Accuracy of students' self-assessment and their beliefs about its utility
Publication
Publication
Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education , Volume 35 - Issue 2 p. 135- 156
The purpose of the two studies presented here was to evaluate the accuracy of students' self-assessment ability, to examine whether this ability improves over time and to investigate whether self-assessment is more accurate if students believe that it contributes to improving learning. To that end, the accuracy of the self-assessments of 3588 first-year students enrolled in a post-secondary institution was studied throughout a semester during which each student made approximately 80 self-assessments about his or her own learning process. These self-assessments were then compared with multiple judgements by peers and tutors. The overall correlations between the scores of self-, peer and tutor assessments suggest weak to moderate accuracy of student self-assessment ability. The findings also reveal an ability effect; students judged as more academically competent were able to self-assess with higher accuracy than their less competent peers. Comparing the accuracy of student self-assessment averaged over four consecutive periods indicates that the accuracy does not improve over time. In a second study, a questionnaire aimed at eliciting student's beliefs about the effects of self-assessment on their learning was administered to 936 first-year students. Based on their responses, sub-groups of students were identified: those who either believed in the usefulness of self-assessment or did not. Results suggest that there is no significant association between student beliefs about the utility of selfassessment and the accuracy of their self-assessments.
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doi.org/10.1080/02602930802687737, hdl.handle.net/1765/25884 | |
Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education | |
Organisation | Rotterdam School of Management (RSM), Erasmus University |
Lew, M. D. N., Alwis, W. A. M., & Schmidt, H. (2010). Accuracy of students' self-assessment and their beliefs about its utility. Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education, 35(2), 135–156. doi:10.1080/02602930802687737 |