Faculty of Education - Research Publications

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 38
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    Threshold quality parameters in hybrid higher education
    Coates, H ; Mahat, M (SPRINGER, 2014-10)
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    The rationale for and use of assessment frameworks: improving assessment and reporting quality in medical education
    Pearce, J ; Edwards, D ; Fraillon, J ; Coates, H ; Canny, BJ ; Wilkinson, D (SPRINGER, 2015-06)
    An assessment framework provides a structured conceptual map of the learning outcomes of a programme of study along with details of how achievement of the outcomes can be measured. The rationale for using frameworks to underpin the targeting of essential content components is especially relevant for the medical education community. Frameworks have the capacity to improve validity and reliability in assessment, allowing test developers to more easily create robust assessment instruments. The framework used by the Australian Medical Assessment Collaboration (AMAC) is an interesting and relevant case study for the international community as it draws and builds on established processes in higher education assessment. The AMAC experience offers an insight into important considerations for designing assessment frameworks and implementing frameworks in differing contexts. There are lessons which have the potential to improve assessment and reporting practice and quality in not only medical education, but in other domains of assessment. Prior to implementing any programme of assessment, the framework considerations outlined here will hopefully improve the quality of assessment and reporting practice by making implicit assumptions explicit, and allowing more critical reflection and evaluation throughout assessment processes.
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    Dropout and Completion in Higher Education in Europe Annex 3: Country case Studies Europe Policy Briefings Australia, U.S.A.
    Kottman, A ; Antonowicz, D ; Boudard, E ; COATES, H ; Cremonini, L ; Decataldo, A ; Hovdhaugen, E ; Kelly, P ; Kolster, R ; Kwiek, M ; Reale, E ; Reymert, I ; Stensaker, B ; Swail, WS ; Thomas, L ; Vlk, A ; Wollscheid, S ( 2015)
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    Assessing student engagement and outcomes: Modelling insights from Australia and around the world
    Coates, H ; Mahat, M (Brill, 2014)
    Assessing how students engage and what they know and can do are pressing change frontiers in contemporary higher education. This paper examines large-scale work that has sought to advance the capacity of higher education systems and institutions to engage students through to graduation and ensure they have capabilities required for future study or work. It reviews contexts fuelling the importance of engagement and learning outcomes, reviews two large-scale case studies, and advances a broad model for structuring assessment collaborations that create and deliver new value for higher education. We conclude by discussing implications and opportunities for Chinese higher education and collaborative international partnerships.
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    Factors associated with job satisfaction amongst australian university academics and future workforce implications
    Bentley, PJ ; Coates, H ; Dobson, IR ; Goedegebuure, L ; Meek, VL ; Bentley, PJ ; Coates, H ; Dobson, IR ; Goedegebuure, L ; Meek, VL (Springer Netherlands, 2013-01-01)
    © Springer Science+Business Media Dordrecht 2013. Australian academics appear to be fairly critical when it comes to their valuing of the attractiveness of the academic profession. On the set of indicators constructed for this volume, Australians, together with their British colleagues, score the lowest. This chapter provides some possible explanations for this, drawing on the policy reforms that have confronted the sector over the last two decades. It also highlights a particular feature of the current profession that so far has not received much attention internationally, namely, its substantive use of casuals in both teaching and research. Combining these issues and trends with the imminent retirement of large groups of senior academics, this chapter concludes with a series of strategies that could be implemented to increase the attractiveness of the profession.
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    Strategic positioning of medical schools: An Australian perspective
    Mahat, M ; Coates, H (Taylor & Francis, 2016)
    Key forces shaping medical education drive medical schools to make strategic choices to locate themselves in niches where they can make use of their resources effectively and efficiently. However, the concepts of strategy in higher education are highly contested issues due to the nature and complexity of the sector and the university, more so for medical schools which operate in an ever more regulated environment. Drawing on data from qualitative semi-structured interviews, this paper investigates the notion of strategic positioning in medical education. The broad findings show that medical schools are somewhat bipolar in nature, in that they seemed to position themselves in terms of teaching and learning, and research. The analysis of strategic positions of medical schools has implications at both institutional and systems levels.
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    Developing generalisable measures of knowledge and skill outcomes in higher education
    Coates, H (Australian Universities Quality Agency, 2007)
    We know much about higher education, but very little about assessing student knowledge and skill in ways which are generalisable beyond specific subjects or courses. This paper argues for greater progress in this rapidly developing area of higher education. It suggests approaches for enhancing the assessment of student knowledge and skill, and considers how these might underpin a model of assessment standards. Preliminary observations are made in conclusion about what might be required to bring such changes into practice. The analysis is by no means intended to be exhaustive, but rather to provide a discursive snapshot of a few main trends and possible developments.
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