Aim: This study will investigate whether, and in
what ways, learners engage with formative and summative feedback
delivered through ePortfolios.
Detailed, appropriate and timely feedback is of the utmost importance
for all learners. Feedback can improve achievement in knowledge
acquisition and skills development, promote deep learning, improve
motivation, increase reflective skills and help learners prepare for
future learning events. Feedback is particularly important for health
science students who undertake activities in the clinical environment
which are less structured and predictable than those in the academic
setting, requiring students to respond by learning in a highly flexible
manner. Interaction with members of the multi-professional team and with
clients adds another challenging dimension to the learning process.
Unfortunately, feedback, a resource-intensive activity, is often
under-valued by students and sometimes ignored. For health science
students it is critical that feedback, as part of the assessment
process, is meaningful and clear, particularly when it relates to
clinical practice. The learner who receives no interactive feedback from
supervisors and tutors or who fails to engage with feedback when it is
offered, is less likely to be able to link theory with practice
effectively.
Unlike other forms of online assessment and feedback, ePortfolios
have the potential to help learners capture, collate and reflect on
feedback, assisting them to develop, over time, a more informed sense of
their skills and achievements and their requirements for PDP/CPD.
Potential barriers to learner engagement with ePortfolios and feedback
could include computer anxiety, lack of access and usability, or
inappropriate use by tutors.
We hope to explore, through focus groups, the benefits and barriers
of health science learners receiving feedback through ePortfolios and
how this compares with their previous experiences of feedback. The
project will develop guidelines and case studies for educators to
improve learner engagement with feedback through ePortfolios. Our
results will be disseminated through a project blog, the HEA, the Centre
for Recording Achievement and JiscInfoNet.
Further information about the project including our project blog is available at: ePortfolio research at QMU.
Download the Final Executive Summary
(220KB)