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In this essay, I will adopt a Problem-Based Learning (PBL) approach using
a newspaper article as a trigger to prompt reflection on student assessment.
Last August, Professor Tsui Lap Chee, the prominent Canadian research
molecular geneticist and the 53rd Lee Kuan Yew Distinguished Visitor at
NUS, was featured as follows in The Straits Times on 1 August 2000:
Be flexible on varsity
entry criteria
Universities should not be too fixated on accepting
students who have a string of straight As.
There should be some flexibility and some open-mindedness
in their student admission, said a visiting molecular geneticist, Professor
Tsui Lap Chee.
He said he himself did not qualify for university.
He did brilliantly in biology, but merely passed his other subjects.
He said: “… In a system where you evaluate by grades, I
couldn’t get into university.”
… If the university had not bent the rules,
he would not be where he is today
To facilitate discussion, I will refer to Prof Tsui also as Mr Tsui at
the time when he was a young student seeking university entrance. What
learning issues on student assessment can be derived from the above passage?
Clearly, students are first being assessed during university admission,
frequently if not exclusively, according to their previous examination
performance. But there are also many other points to ponder.
Issue #1: Why do we assess students?
Student assessment is used to: (a) differentiate high and low performers,
(b) provide feedback on students’ learning, (c) help teachers improve
their teaching, and/or (d) decide which students can advance further (be
rewarded), and which need to undergo remedial training/be detained (be
punished). ‘Formative’ assessment helps improve performance
via feedback, whereas ‘summative’ assessment decides on rewards
or punishment. What should be the proper balance between formative and
summative assessments? Students are usually assessed on the substance
(what do they learn?) and process (how do they learn to go this far?)
of learning through the assessment method of examinations. But which do
examinations predominantly assess: the substance or the process of students’
learning?
Issue #2: How are students selected for university admission?
The summative assessment process, used by universities to select students
with high grades for admission purposes, may exert a profound effect on
a student’s behaviour and future. In the case of Mr Tsui who was
brilliant only in biology, he could have been rejected by the Chinese
University of Hong Kong’s admission office and never had the subsequent
opportunity to go to North America where he was groomed to reach his present-day
eminence.
So the questions raised by Prof Tsui’s comments are as follows:
When assessing students for admission, how far can an institute make exceptions
and still justify the spirit of consistency and fairness? Besides achieving
excellent marks in Biology, what other qualities could Mr Tsui have possessed
to prompt a Dean to justify him as being an ‘exceptional’
case? Should a Faculty’s assessment policy be influenced by the
Dean’s personal favour/bias? Can the Dean’s intervention in
the normal admission process as a special favour to one student, though
based on goodwill, be misinterpreted as a possible under-the-table deal,
an event prevalent in Hong Kong society during the 1960s? Can such ‘underhandedness’
happen today when public awareness of legal rights is more prevalent and
when the admission process has become more competitive since the 1960s?
Why did Prof Tsui advocate to the media about the need for a flexible
university admission process? Will/should this suggestion coming from
a prominent figure like Prof Tsui have any impact on the way a university
assesses students for admission?
Issue #3: How are students being assessed in general?
When Mr Tsui sought university entrance in the late 1960s, grades were
the main yardstick in evaluating students for university admission and
courses. Students with straight As were naturally labelled as ‘good’
students, thus deserving entrance into medical school. This attitude was
basically an extension of the same assessment system existing in secondary
schools where grades represented nothing more than the degree of retention
of taught factual knowledge, usually acquired via rote learning and taught
via didactic teaching.
As a product of the same educational system as Mr Tsui, I did reasonably
well in Biology and Chemistry and scored in Religion when I was a young
student. However, I did so badly in English that I did not stand a chance
to be admitted into the University of Hong Kong, the then Oxford of the
Orient. Twenty-seven years later when I assumed the Chair of Physiology
at this University, I was surprised to find that the assessment of the
University’s medical students had remained practically unchanged:
the Medical Faculty was still merely testing students on the retention
of factual biological knowledge.
When evaluating medical students, shouldn’t other qualities be
considered to adequately prepare them for a highly respected, community-wide
and humanistic profession that deals with life and death? What about assessing
the process, attitude and behaviour of learning (e.g. abilities for life-long
learning and cooperative learning)? What about assessing the competency
expected of a medical professional with regards to team spirit, professionalism,
communication/critical thinking/problem-solving skills, etc.?
While at the University of Hong Kong, I was glad to witness that such
deficiencies were being identified and addressed. Major curriculum reform
took place such that new assessment methods/criteria were developed to
test the competency levels set in the new hybrid-PBL curriculum. However,
why did the University take so long to realise a need for change? What
finally triggered curriculum reform? Is student assessment successfully
being correlated with curriculum structure and affecting students’
learning behaviour positively?
Issue #4: Should assessment methods be in keeping with educational goals?
The simplest, fastest and most comfortable way of adopting assessment
methods is to follow tradition, perhaps with some cosmetic modification.
If one major goal nowadays is to educate students to take an active role
in learning and become life-long learners, then the traditional examination
format can no longer serve a positive steering influence on students’
learning behaviour. Instead, novel assessment methods are needed. But
seeking novel assessment methods requires patience to cope with the slow,
anxiety-ridden process of careful experimentation. Whatever mode taken,
assessment methods should be in line with the product competency, curriculum
and institutional mission. Consequently, assessment methodology should
not be judged as being good or bad, but rather how compatible it is with
the curriculum.
The grades referred to by Prof Tsui presumably result from competitive
examinations. But how reliable are examination grades in defining a student’s
academic performance? Do the grades measure students’ memory capacity
or learning ability? If grades truly measure the former, are examination
grades a valid method of assessment? Are other assessment methods available?
Why aren’t they being used? How often do teachers and educational
administrators think of assessment issues and their improvement, despite
the need to fulfil the university’s mission? How often are student
assessment exercises performed to yield a reliable outcome? What is the
advantage of continuous assessment over segmental assessment and what
are their respective disadvantages? Should there be a general awareness
of proper assessment design for all faculty members or should it be the
responsibility of a special task force?
Through this PBL approach, I have raised a host of issues on student
assessment. Similarly, the same principle can be applied to reflect upon
the quality assurance of teacher assessment, programme assessment and
curriculum assessment. I have purposely kept most questions open-ended,
as it has not been my intention to make pronouncements on assessment and
provide solutions, given that assessment is not a single or a fixed commodity.
There are possibly no solutions to some of the questions. An effective
way to seek answers would be to think about, debate on, and discuss the
questions. Answers or solutions will come, as they will.
Professor Kwan has practised PBL in medical education for nearly
two decades. From June to November 2000, he acted as a PBL consultant
for NUS’ Faculty of Medicine.
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