Feedback Strategies for C-I Teaching & Learning
Communication is a learned skill developed and refined over time. We cannot simply use a textbook and a standardized test to teach and assess the essential skill of communication. It is a transferable skill that requires iterative learning, and feedback is a significant component of the communication skills development process.
Most of us know, and remind our students and colleagues, of the golden rule of feedback: it is not about the person; it’s about the product. But it is not enough to stop at that. Effective feedback should spur improvement through clear, directive steps. It provides substantive and actionable content, and it is timely. Perhaps most importantly, these components combined keep the focus not only on the artefact, but on the reality that much of the work we do is collaborative in nature. Effective thinkers, makers and doers seek sounding boards. if we’re not testing the validity of our ideas, we’re likely not performing to our full potential. As teachers, our job is to create and foster useful sounding boards for our students so they can learn the material as well as learn the process of iterative practice.
Let’s unpack the elements of effective feedback and how to include substantive, actionable content in a timely fashion.
C-I Faculty Share Their Feedback Strategies
Additional Resources
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Giving Your Students Effective Feedback
This ebook from GoReact reviews the basic elements of feedback and gives some helpful do’s and don’ts to keep in mind as you go.
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Reading Each Other's Drafts
Are you hesitant about peer review? Check out these two excerpts from Catherine Prendergast to gain some perspective on the approach.
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30 Formative Feedback Ideas
GoReact has some creative solutions to keep your feedback strategies from getting stale.
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20 Ways to Cut Grading Time in Half
From the Cult of Pedagogy, Jennifer Gonzalez provides practical tips to save you time without sacrificing course goals.
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Strategies for Effective Peer Review
LSU Communication Across the Curriculum’s Annemarie Galeucia shares the basics for giving and receiving valuable feedback.
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Sample Rubric for Peer Review
Professor Christina Rothenbeck, a C-I instructor in English, shares a substantive assessment to guide students as they perform a peer review.
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Tech Tools: Text-based Feedback
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Tech Tools: Audio/Visual-based Feedback
Zoom (could use this for synchronous feedback sessions too)
Jing (voice, screen)
Screencastomatic (voice, screen, webcam)
Videonot.es (time coded video feedback, Google add-on)
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Tech Tools: Media for Creating and Grading Multimedia
Voicethread for creating and providing feedback on multiple modes of assignments
Flipgrid for creating and providing feedback on video submissions