The author points out that the effectiveness of feedback depends on how students hear it. Have your teachers ever checked to see what you understand about
1. The author points out that the effectiveness of feedback depends on how students hear it. Have your teachers ever checked to see what you understand about their feedback? Did feedback empower you? If so, describe the event. If not, plan a way you would try this in your classroom.
December 2007/January 2008 | Volume 65 | Number 4
Informative Assessment Pages 54-59
Feedback That Fits Susan M. Brookhart
To craft teacher feedback that leads to learning, put
yourself in the student's shoes.
From the student's point of view, the ideal "script" for formative assessment
reads something like, "Here is how close you are to the knowledge or skills
you are trying to develop, and here's what you need to do next." The
feedback teachers give students is at the heart of that script. But feedback is
only effective when it translates into a clear, positive message that students can hear.
Student Understanding and Control The power of formative assessment lies in its double-barreled approach, addressing both cognitive and
motivational factors. Good formative assessment gives students information they need to understand where
they are in their learning (the cognitive factor) and develops students' feelings of control over their learning
(the motivational factor).
Precisely because students' feelings of self-efficacy are involved, however, even well-intentioned feedback
can be very destructive if the student reads the script in an unintended way ("See, I knew I was stupid!").
Research on feedback shows its Jekyll-and-Hyde character. Not all studies of feedback show positive
effects; the nature of the communication matters a great deal.
Recently, researchers have tried to tease out what makes some feedback effective, some ineffective, and
some downright harmful (Butler & Winne, 1995; Hattie & Timperley, 2007; Kluger & DeNisi, 1996). Other
researchers have described the characteristics of effective feedback (Johnston, 2004; Tunstall & Gipps,
1996). From parsing this research and reflecting on my own experience as an educational consultant
working with elementary and secondary teachers on assessment issues, particularly the difference between
formative assessment and grading, I have identified what makes for powerful feedback—in terms of how
teachers deliver it and the content it contains.
Good feedback contains information a student can use. That means, first, that the student has to be able to
hear and understand it. A student can't hear something that's beyond his comprehension, nor can a student
hear something if she's not listening or if she feels like it's useless to listen. The most useful feedback
focuses on the qualities of student work or the processes or strategies used to do the work. Feedback that
draws students' attention to their self-regulation strategies or their abilities as learners is potent if students
hear it in a way that makes them realize they will get results by expending effort and attention.
Following are suggestions for the most effective ways to deliver feedback and the most effective content of
feedback. Notice that all these suggestions are based on knowing your students well. There is no magic
bullet that will be just right for all students at all times.
Effective Ways to Deliver Feedback
When to Give Feedback
If a student is studying facts or simple concepts—like basic math—he or she needs immediate information
about whether an answer is right or wrong—such as the kind of feedback flash cards give. For learning
targets that develop over time, like writing or problem solving, wait until you have observed patterns in
student work that provide insights into how they are doing the work, which will help you make suggestions
about next steps. A general principle for gauging the timing of feedback is to put yourself in the student's
place. When would a student want to hear feedback? When he or she is still thinking about the work, of
course. It's also a good idea to give feedback as often as is practical, especially for major assignments.
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How Much Feedback?
Probably the hardest decision concerns the amount of feedback. A natural inclination is to want to "fix"
everything you see. That's the teacher's-eye view, where the target is perfect achievement of all learning
goals. Try to see things from the student's-eye view. On which aspects of the learning target has the student
done good work? Which aspects of the learning goals need improvement and should be addressed next?
Are any assignments coming up that would make it wiser to emphasize one point over another? Consider
also students' developmental level.
What Mode Is Best?
Some kinds of assignments lend themselves better to written feedback (for example, reviewing written work);
some to oral feedback (observing as students do math problems); and some to demonstrations (helping a
kindergarten student hold a pencil correctly). Some of the best feedback results from conversations with the
student. Peter Johnston's (2004) book Choice Words discusses how to ask questions that help students
help you provide feedback. For example, rather than telling the student all the things you notice about his or
her work, start by asking, "What are you noticing about this? Does anything surprise you?" or "Why did you
decide to do it this way?"
You should also decide whether individual or group feedback is best. Individual feedback tells a student that
you value his or her learning, whereas group feedback provides opportunities for wider reteaching. These
choices are not mutually exclusive. For example, say many students used bland or vague terms in a writing
assignment. You might choose to give the whole class feedback on their word choices, with examples of how
to use precise or vivid words, and follow up with thought-provoking questions for individual students, such
as, "What other words could you use instead of big?" or "How could you describe this event so someone
else would see how terrible it was for you?"
The Best Content for Feedback Composing feedback is a skill in itself. The choices you make on what you say to a student will, of course,
have a big influence on how the student interprets your feedback. Again, the main principle is considering
the student's perspective.
Focus on Work and Process
Effective feedback describes the student's work, comments on the process the student used to do the work,
and makes specific suggestions for what to do next. General praise ("Good job!") or personal comments
don't help. The student might be pleased you approve, but not sure what was good about the work, and so
unable to replicate its quality. Process-focused comments, on the other hand, give suggestions that move
the work closer to the target, such as, "Can you rewrite that sentence so it goes better with the one before
it?"
Relate Feedback to the Goal For feedback to drive the formative assessment cycle, it needs to describe where the student is in relation to
the learning goal. In so doing, it helps each student decide what his or her next goal should be. Feedback
that helps a student see his or her own progress gives you a chance to point out the processes or methods
that successful students use. ("I see you checked your work this time. Your computations were all correct,
too! See how well that works?") Self-referenced feedback about the work itself ("Did you notice you have all
the names capitalized this time?") is helpful for struggling students, who need to understand that they can
make progress as much as they need to understand how far they are from the ultimate goal.
Try for Description, Not Judgment
Certain students are less likely to pay attention to descriptive feedback if it is accompanied by a formal
judgment, like a grade or an evaluative comment. Some students will even hear judgment where you intend
description. Unsuccessful learners have sometimes been so frustrated by their school experiences that they
might see every attempt to help them as just another declaration that they are "stupid." For these learners,
point out improvements over their previous performance, even if those improvements don't amount to overall
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success on the assignment. Then select one or two small, doable next steps. After the next round of work,
give the student feedback on his or her success with those steps, and so on.
Be Positive and Specific
Being positive doesn't mean being artificially happy or saying work is good when it isn't. It means describing
how the strengths in a student's work match the criteria for good work and how they show what that student
is learning. And it means choosing words that communicate respect for the student and the work. Your tone
should indicate that you are making helpful suggestions and giving the student a chance to take the
initiative. ("This paper needs more detail. You could add more explanation about the benefits of recycling, or
you could add more description of what should be done in your neighborhood. Which suggestion do you
plan to try first?") If feedback comes across as a lecture or suggestions come across as orders, students will
not understand that they are in charge of their own learning.
Feedback should be specific enough that the student knows what to do next, but not so specific that you do
the work. Identifying errors or types of errors is a good idea, but correcting every error doesn't leave the
student anything to do.
These feedback principles apply to both simple and complex assignments, and to all subjects and grade
levels. The following example of ineffective and, especially, effective feedback on a writing assignment
reflects these principles in practice.
A Tale of Two Feedback Choices As part of a unit on how to write effective paragraphs, a 4th grade teacher assigned her students to write a
paragraph answering the question, "Do dogs or cats make better pets?" They were asked to have a clear
topic sentence, a clear concluding sentence, and at least three supporting details. Figure 1 shows what a
student named Anna wrote and what ineffective teacher feedback on Anna's paragraph might look like.
Figure 1. Ineffective Feedback on Anna's Writing Assignment
To provide feedback, this teacher decided to make written comments on each student's paper and return the
papers to students the day after they turned them in. So far, so good. However, the feedback in Figure 1 is
all about the mechanics of writing. This doesn't match the learning target for this assignment, which was to
structure a paragraph to make a point and to have that point contained in a topic sentence. Because the
mechanical corrections are the only comments, the message seems to be that Anna's next step is to fix those
errors. However, this teacher has already fixed the errors for her. All Anna has to do is recopy this
paragraph. Moreover, there is no guarantee she would understand why some words and punctuation marks
were changed. Recopying by rote could result in a "perfect" paragraph with no learning involved!
The worst part about this feedback, however, is that it doesn't communicate to Anna that she did, in fact,
demonstrate the main paragraphing skills that were the learning target. Anna successfully fashioned a topic
sentence and a concluding sentence and provided supporting details. She needs to understand that she has
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accomplished this. Once she knows that, suggestions about how to make her good work even better make
sense.
Figure 2 lists effective comments a teacher might write on Anna's paper or, preferably (because there is
more to say than a teacher might want to write or a 4th grader might want to read), discuss with her in a brief
conference. A teacher would probably use a few—but not all—of these comments, depending on
circumstances.
Figure 2. Examples of Effective Feedback on Anna's Writing Assignment
Possible Teacher Comments What's Best About This Feedback
Your topic sentence and concluding sentence
are clear and go together well.
These comments describe achievement in
terms of the criteria for the assignment. They
show the student that you noticed these
specific features and connected them to the
criteria for good work.
You used a lot of details. I count seven different
things you like about dogs.
Your paragraph makes me wonder if you have a
dog who is playful, strong, cute, and cuddly. Did
you think about your own dog to write your
paragraph? When you write about things you
know, the writing often sounds real like this.
This comment would be especially useful for
a student who had not previously been
successful with the writing process. The
comment identifies the strategy the student
has used for writing and affirms that it was a
good one. Note that "the writing often
sounds genuine" might be better English, but
"real" is probably clearer for this 4th grader.
Your reasons are all about dogs. Readers
would already have to know what cats are like.
They wouldn't know from your paragraph
whether cats are playful, for instance. When
you compare two things, write about both of the
things you are comparing.
This constructive feedback criticizes a
specific feature of the work, explains the
reason for the criticism, and suggests what
to do about it.
Did you check your spelling? See if you can find
two misspelled words.
These comments about style and mechanics
do not directly reflect the learning target,
which was about paragraphing. However,
they concern important writing skills. Their
appropriateness would depend on how
strongly spelling, style/usage, and word
choice figure into the longer-term learning
targets.
Feedback about making the topic sentence a
stronger lead might best be done as a
demonstration. In conference, show the student
the topic sentence with and without "This is
why" and ask which sentence she thinks reads
more smoothly and why. Ask whether "This is
why" adds anything that the sentence needs.
You might point out that these words read better
in the concluding sentence.
Notice that these comments first compare the student's work with the criteria for the assignment, which were
aligned with the learning goal. They acknowledge that Anna's paragraph shows that she understands how to
produce a topic sentence, supporting details, and a concluding sentence.
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The rest of the feedback choices depends on the context. How much time is available to discuss this paper?
Which other feedback comments would align with learning targets that have previously been emphasized in
class? Which of the possible next steps would be most beneficial for this particular student, given her
previous writing? For example, if Anna is a successful writer who likes writing, she probably already knows
that describing traits she has observed in her own dog was a good strategy. If she has previously been an
unsuccessful writer but has produced a paragraph better than her usual work—because the assignment
finally asked a question about which she has something to say—it would be worth communicating to her that
you noticed and naming "write about what you know" as a good strategy for future writing.
Feedback Practice Makes Perfect Feedback choices present themselves continually in teaching. You have opportunities to give feedback as
you observe students do their work in class and again as you look at the finished work. Take as many
opportunities as you can to give students positive messages about how they are doing relative to the
learning targets and what might be useful to do next. Make as many opportunities as you can to talk with
your students about their work. As you do, you will develop a repertoire of feedback strategies that work for
your subject area and students. The main thing to keep in mind when using any strategy is how students will
hear, feel, and understand the feedback.
References
Butler, D. L., & Winne, P. H. (1995). Feedback and self-regulated learning: A
theoretical synthesis. Review of Educational Research, 65, 245–281.
Hattie, J., & Timperley, H. (2007). The power of feedback. Review of Educational
Research, 77, 81–112.
Johnston, P. H. (2004). Choice words: How our language affects children's learning.
Portland, ME: Stenhouse.
Kluger, A. N., & DeNisi, A. (1996). The effects of feedback interventions on
performance: A historical review, a meta-analysis, and a preliminary feedback
intervention theory. Psychological Bulletin, 119, 254–284.
Tunstall, P., & Gipps, C. (1996). Teacher feedback to young children in formative
assessment: A typology. British Educational Research Journal, 22, 389–404.
Susan M. Brookhart is an educational consultant and Senior Research Associate at the Center for Advancing the
Study of Teaching and Learning (CASTL) at Duquesne University in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. She is the author of the
upcoming (Fall 2008) ASCD book, How to Give Good Feedback; [email protected].
Copyright © 2007 by Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development
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,
Activity 2: Providing effective feedback.
After reading the article “Feedback that fits” and Handout 4.2 answer these reflection questions.
1. The author points out that the effectiveness of feedback depends on how students hear it. Have your teachers ever checked to see what you understand about their feedback? Did feedback empower you? If so, describe the event. If not, plan a way you would try this in your classroom.
2. Reflect on the feedback you usually see/receive/give in a classroom. On the basis of the suggestions in the article, select one aspect of feedback you would want to work on. Explain your choice and describe what you would want to try. Most importantly, describe how you would know what effect your feedback has on your future students.
3. Think about feedback given to reluctant or struggling students. How can you remain positive for these students, and how would you decide what small, next steps to suggest for them?
4. Think about feedback given to successful learners. Should you suggest next steps for expanding learning for students who have achieved the learning goals on the assignment? If not, what sort of feedback should you give them and what should they do with it?
5. What interested you the most about this article?
Adapted from: Brookhart, S. M. (2009) Exploring formative assessment. ASCD, Alexandria, VA.
Brookhart, S. M. (2009) Handout 4.2. Exploring formative assessment. ASCD, Alexandria, VA, p.43.
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