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Authentic versus traditional assessment: an empirical study investigating the difference in seafarer students’ academic achievement

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-20, 10:55 authored by Samrat GhoshSamrat Ghosh, Benjamin BrooksBenjamin Brooks, Susantha RanmuthugalaSusantha Ranmuthugala, Marcus Bowles
Past research showed that traditional assessment methods that required seafarer students to construct responses based on memorisation and analysing information presented in absence of real-world contexts (e.g. oral examinations and multiple-choice questions) disengaged the students from learning. Memorising information is a lower-order cognitive ability, failure in which led to errors and low academic achievement for students. Authentic assessment methods require students to construct responses through the critical analysis of information presented in real-world contexts. Hence, this research investigated the difference in seafarer students' academic achievement (measured through scores obtained in assessment) in authentic assessment as compared with traditional assessment. Two separate and independent student groups (the ‘control’ group and ‘treatment’ group) were used for a selected unit of learning delivered at the Australian Maritime College within the Bachelor of Nautical Science degree program. Because some past researchers had defined and implemented traditional assessment methods as a single-occasion assessment, this project implemented the assessment in a summative format, as opposed to authentic assessments implemented during student preparation. Analysis of student scores revealed that the authentically assessed students were guided towards significantly higher academic achievement.

History

Publication title

Journal of Navigation

Volume

73

Issue

4

Pagination

797-812

ISSN

0373-4633

Department/School

Australian Maritime College

Publisher

Cambridge Univ Press

Place of publication

40 West 20Th St, New York, USA, Ny, 10011-4211

Rights statement

Copyright 2020 The Royal Institute of Navigation

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Learner and learning not elsewhere classified; Assessment, development and evaluation of curriculum; International sea freight transport (excl. live animals, food products and liquefied gas)