Being “in” assessment: the ontological layer(ing) of assessment practice
Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education
ISSN: 2050-7003
Article publication date: 8 April 2014
Abstract
Purpose
Current discourses on educational assessment focus on the priority of learning. While this intent is invariably played out in classroom practice, a consideration of the ontological nature of assessment practice opens understandings which show the experiential nature of “being in assessment”. The purpose of this paper is to discuss these issues.
Design/methodology/approach
Using interpretive and hermeneutic analyses within a phenomenological inquiry, experiential accounts of the nature of assessment are worked for their emergent and ontological themes.
Findings
These stories show the ontological nature of assessment as a matter of being in assessment in an embodied and holistic way.
Originality/value
Importantly, the nature of a teacher's way-of-being matters to assessment practices. Implications exist for teacher educators and teacher education programmes in relation to the priority of experiential stories for understanding assessment practice, the need for re-balancing a concern for professional knowledge and practice with a students’ way of being in assessment, and the pedagogical implications of evoking sensitivities in assessment.
Keywords
Citation
Giles, D. and Earl, K. (2014), "Being “in” assessment: the ontological layer(ing) of assessment practice", Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, Vol. 6 No. 1, pp. 22-29. https://doi.org/10.1108/JARHE-01-2012-0001
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2014, Emerald Group Publishing Limited