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Contribution to Book
Student Participation in Assessment: Does it influence self-regulation?
Handbook of human and social factors in assessment (2016)
  • Daniel L. Dinsmore
  • Hope E. Wilson
Abstract
Typically, assessment is viewed as a process in which a person with more expertise (e.g., a teacher) evaluates a more novice individual (e.g., a student) using multiple sources of information to make this evaluation (e.g., tests, observations of student behavior [AERA, APA, & NCME, 1999]). In these relationships, there is an assumed hierarchy between teacher and student in the evaluation process, with the teacher having considerable power over the student and, thus, potentially regulating students’ behavior. However, the argument exists that children taking an active role in assessment increases their self-regulation (Nicol & Macfarlane-Dick, 2006), which, in turn, has been shown to have positive benefits for student achievement (Pintrich & De Groot, 1990).
Keywords
  • assessment,
  • educational psychology
Publication Date
July 11, 2016
Editor
G.T.L. Brown, L.R. Harris
Publisher
Routledge
DOI
10.4324/9781315749136.ch9
Citation Information
Daniel L. Dinsmore and Hope E. Wilson. "Student Participation in Assessment: Does it influence self-regulation?" New YorkHandbook of human and social factors in assessment (2016) p. 145 - 168
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/daniel-dinsmore/24/