Enhancing Equity, Agency, and Transparency in Assessment Practices in Higher Education Erasmus Project
General information for the Enhancing Equity, Agency, and Transparency in Assessment Practices in Higher Education Erasmus Project
Project Title
Enhancing Equity, Agency, and Transparency in Assessment Practices in Higher Education
Project Key Action
This project related with these key action: Cooperation for innovation and the exchange of good practices
Project Action Type
This project related with this action type : Strategic Partnerships for higher education
Project Call Year
This project’s Call Year is 2020
Project Topics
This project is related with these Project Topics: New innovative curricula/educational methods/development of training courses; Research and innovation; Inclusion – equity
Project Summary
Our project aims to support educators in developing and implementing high quality, innovative assessment practices by use of a research-informed participatory assessment framework (EAT; Evans, 2016). The project addresses a significant higher education (HE) need to substantially enhance the quality of assessment practices. EAT emphasises Equity, Agency and Transparency in assessment. It seeks to tackle issues of central importance to universities world-wide, ensuring that assessment is fit for purpose in promoting the knowledge, skills and understanding that graduates need to thrive in the 4th industrial revolution, and that assessment design provides equal opportunities for all students to excel.
To enhance assessment practices significantly, an understanding of integrative, inclusive and self-regulatory approaches to assessment is essential. The project addresses the significant rhetoric-reality disconnect between research into assessment and its implementation in HE practice. Assessment should be an enabler of learning, but often poor assessment design is a constraint that unintentionally limits learning. Well-designed assessment lies at the heart of good teaching and high impact pedagogies within HE. Excellent assessment and feedback promotes equality of opportunity, drives curriculum change, directs advances in knowledge and understanding, and supports life-long learning.
Our project focuses on: Implementation of relevant and authentic assessment; identification and development of core competencies to support learner ownership of assessment, required as a life-skill; and training for academics and students to realise such goals. The project aims to produce a suite of practical resources to support academic staff in developing a student-centred approach to assessment, and to share good practice.
There are 6 partners: 5 universities (in Spain, Portugal, Kosovo, UK) and 1 professional organisation (Belgium). Each partner has strong records of engagement with professional development in HE. They provide a rich assortment of expertise for the development of case studies and resources.
In order to promote inclusive integrative approaches to assessment, greater investment is required to support professional development of educators’ assessment literacy. Staff development is a central facet of this project. Research has identified the critical role that educators’ pedagogical understanding has on design and delivery of assessment (Evans et al., 2018; Farley-Ripple et al., 2018). The project develops a range of mechanisms to support teacher understanding and implementation of high impact self-regulatory assessment practices.
The project is innovative in its use of EAT, an integrated assessment framework that reveals variables impacting learning and teaching in HE. EAT emphasizes the importance of student/staff engagement as partners in assessment. EAT promotes learner self-regulation of assessment, combining understanding of cognitive, emotional and metacognitive dimensions of learning. The integrated theoretical framework is unique in its synthesis of neuroscience, education, and cognitive/educational psychology. The project aligns closely with the EU agenda for HE through its emphasis on: Developing authentic assessment practices; supporting student entry and progression within and beyond HE through development of self-regulatory and resilience skills-for-life; and in addressing social justice issues (equity in learners’ higher education assessment experiences and outcomes).
EAT will be used to inform the enhancement of assessment practices, working collaboratively to improve provision for learners. Drawing on the inclusive principles of EAT, we will address the research-practice gap in assessment, to promote transformative change in assessment across the sector. Focus will be on: (i) supporting development of learner self-regulatory skills through development of a self-regulatory competency framework; (ii) providing case studies of how an integrative approach to assessment can be implemented, sensitive to cultural differences, to support learner agency and success; (iii) developing training approaches (courses and materials) to support understanding and implementation of integrative assessment, including a continuing professional development assessment programme; (iv) developing an assessment standards framework to raise standards of assessment practice within/across institutions, with potential for scaling up across the sector; (v) creating an assessment recognition scheme to acknowledge and reward competency in assessment.
EAT promotes a participatory and evidence-informed approach to support shared understanding of effective assessment practices for all learners. This implementation-evaluative approach aims to enhance the quality of HE assessment practices at local, national, and international levels, and to be sector-leading in its promotion of research-informed, student-centred, inclusive assessment.
EU Grant (Eur)
Funding of the project from EU: 427595 Eur
Project Coordinator
CARDIFF UNIVERSITY & Country: UK
Project Partners
- UNIVERSIDADE DO MINHO
- UNIVERSIDAD DE ZARAGOZA
- EUROGEO VZW
- UNIVERSITY OF BRISTOL
- Kolegji ILIRIA

