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Migration and Transformation: A Sociomaterial Analysis of Practitioners' Experiences with Online Exams

Title: Migration and Transformation: A Sociomaterial Analysis of Practitioners' Experiences with Online Exams
Language: English
Authors: Allan, Stuart
Source: Research in Learning Technology. 2020 28.
Availability: Association for Learning Technology. Gipsy Lane, Headington, Oxford OX3 0BO, UK. e-mail: enquiries@alt.ac.uk; Web site: https://journal.alt.ac.uk
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 14
Publication Date: 2020
Document Type: Journal Articles; Reports - Research
Education Level: Higher Education; Postsecondary Education
Descriptors: Foreign Countries; Student Evaluation; Computer Assisted Testing; Educational Benefits; Educational Change; Evaluation Methods; Adoption (Ideas); Higher Education; College Faculty; Teacher Attitudes
Geographic Terms: Norway; Netherlands; United Kingdom; Ireland
ISSN: 2156-7069
Abstract: Many institutions are making the move from pen and paper to online examinations, but the literature offers relatively few critical reflections on the ramifications of such a shift. This research presents evidence of the ways in which the social and human practices of online exams are deeply entangled with the material and technological, and cautions against the reinscribing of essentialist or instrumentalist assumptions about technology in assessment practices. Through semi-structured interviews with eight practitioners in Norway, the Netherlands, the UK and Ireland, it analyses the impact, dimensions and limitations of two main discourses: "migration," whereby exam technologies are assumed to be neutral instruments used independently by humans to realise their preordained intentions; and "transformation," whereby the essential and inalienable qualities of technologies can be released to 'transform' or 'enhance' assessment. Its findings indicate that: (1) exam technologies are neither inherently neutral nor essentially transformational; (2) implementation projects underpinned by the migration discourse can be much more complex and resource-intensive than anticipated; and (3) 'transformative' change may be value-laden and driven by assumptions. Given the complex and entangled nature of online exams, practitioners are encouraged to think creatively about how assessment strategies align with educational goals, to consider the limitations of current discourses and to analyse critically the relational and performative roles of digital technologies.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2020
Accession Number: EJ1244374
Database: ERIC