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- Title
Cumulative assessment: strategic choices to influence students' study effort.
- Authors
Kerdijk, Wouter; Tio, René A.; Florentine Mulder, B.; Cohen-Schotanus, Janke
- Abstract
Background It has been asserted that assessment can and should be used to drive students' learning. In the current study, we present a cumulative assessment program in which test planning, repeated testing and compensation are combined in order to influence study effort. The program is aimed at helping initially low-scoring students improve their performance during a module, without impairing initially high-scoring students' performance. We used performance as a proxy for study effort and investigated whether the program worked as intended. Methods We analysed students' test scores in two second-year (n = 494 and n = 436) and two thirdyear modules (n = 383 and n = 345) in which cumulative assessment was applied. We used ttests to compare the change in test scores of initially low-scoring students with that of initially high-scoring students between the first and second subtest and again between the combined first and second subtest and the third subtest. During the interpretation of the outcomes we took regression to the mean and test difficulty into account. Results Between the first and the second subtest in all four modules, the scores of initially lowscoring students increased more than the scores of initially high-scoring students decreased. Between subtests two and three, we found a similar effect in one module, no significant effect in two modules and the opposite effect in another module. Conclusion The results between the first two subtests suggest that cumulative assessment may positively influence students' study effort. The inconsistent outcomes between subtests two and three may be caused by differences in perceived imminence, impact and workload between the third subtest and the first two. Cumulative assessment may serve as an example of how several evidence-based assessment principles can be integrated into a program for the benefit of student learning.
- Subjects
STUDENTS &; society; LEARNING management; TEST scoring; COGNITIVE structures; LEARNING ability
- Publication
BMC Medical Education, 2013, Vol 13, Issue 1, p1
- ISSN
1472-6920
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1186/1472-6920-13-172