Subscribe
Notify of

5 Comments
Newest
Oldest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Matthew Weekes
7 years ago

I have been working on applying phenomenological research methodologies to “informal assessment”.
I believe that the reality is that in the Drama classroom, the cognitive process of the Drama teacher working in the space with students often informs assessment in an ongoing process loop.
Indeed “performance” taking in a broader context of the word includes playmaking techniques (including rehearsal) and can be seen as performative processes that occur during the whole time a student participates in class.

Phenomenological assessment is actually more rigorous than rubrics, written exams, performances and various other things that pass for assessment, which are often far more subjective than most educators and academics would like to admit. The greater number of subjective assessors actually increases subjectivity not reduces it. Subjectivity piled upon subjectivity does not make something objective.

Practical phenomenological processes such as bracketing allow the teacher to enter a state of objective observation without the codification and expectation of the student’s work.

This formalises the so-called “informal assessment” in a classroom environment. The phenomenological descriptive responses of the teacher can then lead to qualitative and then to quantitative assessments.

What makes art “art” is often not criteria, but the individuality of the art. In other words, how the art transcends or “breaks” the rubric.

Grace Berne
10 years ago

Sometimes discussion and reflection is like getting blood from a stone.
But every so often someone will revel something to show they have been doing ‘secret reading’ away from the perscribed work.
I was told the other day by a student that we should go on a trip to the US to undertake some ‘second city’ workshops!
My my, off we hop then. Maybe we could do the double and hit the ‘upright citizans brigade’ as well???

AyeshaC
10 years ago

Cash!
It’s so great that whenever I check your blog I always find a post so relevant to my uni work! Doing subject on literacy across the curriculum at the moment and a lot on authentic assessment- this post is a great help 🙂

Hope all is well