Frontiers in Education (Nov 2018)

From “Seeing Through” to “Seeing With”: Assessment Criteria and the Myths of Transparency

  • Margaret Bearman,
  • Rola Ajjawi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2018.00096
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3

Abstract

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The notion of “transparency” has been extensively critiqued with respect to higher education. These critiques have serious implications for how educators may think about, develop, and work with assessment criteria. This conceptual paper draws from constructivist and post-structural critiques of transparency to challenge two myths associated with assessment criteria: (1) transparency is achievable and (2) transparency is neutral. Transparency is interrogated as a social and political notion; assessment criteria are positioned as never completely transparent texts which fulfill various agendas. Some of these agendas support learning but this is not inevitable. This conceptual paper prompts educators and administrators to be mindful about how they think about, use, and develop assessment criteria, in order to avoid taken-for-granted practices, which may not benefit student learning.

Keywords