Journal Articles
Hong Kong tertiary students' conceptions of assessment of academic ability
- Hong Kong tertiary students' conceptions of assessment of academic ability
- Higher Education Research & Development, 33(5), 1063-1077, 2014
- Routledge
- 2014
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Post-Secondary Education
- Students' beliefs, attitudes, experiences and responses towards assessment reflect the ecology of their specific context. The study examines Hong Kong tertiary students' conceptions of assessment using focus group interviews and the content analysis technique. Using six focus groups, 26 Hong Kong university students were interviewed. Hong Kong tertiary students associated assessment with lifelong high-stake examinations. The assessment determined an individual's personal value or worth and achievement was an obligation one had towards one's family. As a legitimate tool for selecting the best candidates for educational and career opportunities, assessment provided upward social mobility, but also served the function of monitoring and surveillance to shape people's behaviour according to societal expectations. Resilience was reflected in both self-regulative agentic responses of effort, persistence and gaming strategy and passive escaping from the oppressive assessment system. The general emotional reaction towards assessment was negative; and participants cast doubts on the assessment validity, accuracy and the limited utility confined by academic-only content. In addition to the portrayal of the Chinese student as an effective, persistent learner, this study shows that Chinese students are very aware of the negative, controlling impact of assessment on their lives.[Copyright of Higher Education Research & Development is the property of Routledge. Full article may be available at the publisher's website: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/07294360.2014.890565]
-
- English
- Journal Articles
-
- 07294360
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/bibs/8b1c47bd
- 2014-10-22
Recent Journal Articles
Researching L2 investment in EMI courses: Techno-reflective narrative interviewsJournal Articles
Technostress and English language teaching in the age of generative AIJournal Articles
Playfulness and kindergarten children's academic skills: Executive functions and creative thinking processes as mediators?Journal Articles
Teaching EFL students to write with ChatGPT: Students' motivation to learn, cognitive load, and satisfaction with the learning processJournal Articles
Revamping an English for specific academic purposes course for problem-based learning: Reflections from course developersJournal Articles
Contrasting mathematics educational values: An in-depth case study of primary and secondary teachers in Hong KongJournal Articles
Cross-disciplinary challenges: Navigating power dynamics in advocating an entrepreneurial STEM curriculumJournal Articles
An exploration of microlearning as continuous professional development for English language teachers: Initial findings and insightsJournal Articles