Feedback Pedagogy
Transform feedback from judgment to learning opportunity.
Feedback Philosophy
Feedback vs Evaluation
| Evaluation | Feedback |
|---|---|
| Judges quality | Improves quality |
| Backward-looking | Forward-looking |
| "This is wrong" | "Here's how to improve" |
| Grade | Growth |
Effective Feedback Is...
- •Specific: Points to exact moments, not vague impressions
- •Actionable: Gives clear next steps
- •Timely: Close enough to remember context
- •Balanced: Acknowledges strengths and growth areas
- •Goal-referenced: Tied to learning objectives
Written Feedback Framework
The Feedback Sandwich (Use Sparingly)
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Strength → Growth Area → Encouragement
Better: Targeted feedback that addresses what matters most.
The 3-2-1 Model
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3 things done well (specific examples) 2 areas for development (with suggestions) 1 question to consider (promotes reflection)
Feedback Comment Types
| Type | Purpose | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Praise | Reinforce effective choices | "Your thesis clearly states your argument and previews your main points" |
| Explanation | Clarify why something matters | "Topic sentences help readers follow your logic" |
| Suggestion | Offer concrete improvement | "Try adding a transition here to connect these ideas" |
| Question | Prompt deeper thinking | "What evidence would strengthen this claim?" |
| Reader response | Share authentic reaction | "I got lost here—what's the main point?" |
Prioritization
Don't mark everything. Focus on:
- •
Higher-order concerns first
- •Thesis/argument
- •Organization/structure
- •Evidence/support
- •Analysis/development
- •
Then lower-order concerns
- •Sentence clarity
- •Word choice
- •Grammar/mechanics
- •Formatting
Comment Placement
| Location | Use For |
|---|---|
| Marginal | Specific, local issues |
| End note | Big-picture patterns, priorities |
| Rubric | Systematic criteria assessment |
Rubric Design
Rubric Types
| Type | Description | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Holistic | Single score, overall quality | Quick assessment, writing portfolios |
| Analytic | Separate scores per criterion | Detailed feedback, skill isolation |
| Single-point | Criteria list, no levels | Flexibility, avoiding "teaching to rubric" |
Analytic Rubric Template
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## [Assignment Name] Rubric | Criterion | Excellent (4) | Good (3) | Developing (2) | Beginning (1) | |-----------|---------------|----------|----------------|---------------| | Thesis | Clear, arguable, specific thesis that addresses prompt | Thesis present and mostly clear | Thesis unclear or too broad | No identifiable thesis | | Evidence | Multiple relevant, well-integrated sources | Adequate evidence with some integration issues | Limited or poorly integrated evidence | Little to no evidence | | Analysis | Sophisticated analysis connecting evidence to argument | Analysis present but could be deeper | Summary more than analysis | Minimal analysis | | Organization | Clear structure with effective transitions | Mostly organized with some rough transitions | Disorganized or hard to follow | No discernible structure | | Mechanics | Nearly error-free | Few errors that don't impede meaning | Errors sometimes impede meaning | Errors significantly impede meaning | **Total: ___/20**
Single-Point Rubric Template
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## [Assignment Name] Single-Point Rubric | Areas for Growth | Criterion (Proficient) | Areas of Strength | |------------------|------------------------|-------------------| | [Space for feedback] | Clear thesis that takes a position | [Space for feedback] | | [Space for feedback] | Evidence supports all major claims | [Space for feedback] | | [Space for feedback] | Analysis explains how evidence proves thesis | [Space for feedback] | | [Space for feedback] | Logical organization with transitions | [Space for feedback] | | [Space for feedback] | Appropriate academic style | [Space for feedback] |
Rubric Design Principles
- •Align criteria with learning objectives
- •Use observable, measurable language
- •Avoid vague terms ("good," "adequate")
- •Include descriptors at each level
- •Share rubric with students BEFORE assignment
Peer Review Facilitation
Preparing Students
- •Model feedback using examples
- •Practice on anonymous samples
- •Provide structured protocols
- •Establish community norms
Peer Review Protocol
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## Peer Review Guide **Reader**: [Name] **Writer**: [Name] ### First Read (Big Picture) Read the whole piece without stopping. Note your overall impression. - What is the main argument? - What worked well? - What confused you? ### Second Read (Detailed) Answer these questions with specific examples: 1. **Thesis**: Can you identify the thesis? Is it arguable? 2. **Structure**: Does the organization make sense? Where did you get lost? 3. **Evidence**: Which evidence is most convincing? Where do you need more? 4. **Analysis**: Where could the writer dig deeper? ### Feedback Summary - One thing that's working well: - One thing to prioritize in revision: - One question for the writer:
Peer Review Norms
Readers should:
- •Be specific (cite examples)
- •Ask questions
- •Suggest, don't command
- •Focus on the writing, not the writer
Writers should:
- •Listen without defending
- •Ask clarifying questions
- •Take notes
- •Decide what feedback to use
Verbal Feedback (Conferences)
Conference Structure
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1. Open: "What do you want me to focus on?" 2. Listen: Let student identify concerns 3. Prioritize: "Let's focus on X because..." 4. Demonstrate: Model revision strategy 5. Apply: Have student try it 6. Close: "What's your next step?"
Questioning Techniques
| Instead of... | Try... |
|---|---|
| "This is unclear" | "What do you mean here?" |
| "Add more detail" | "What else could you tell me about this?" |
| "This doesn't make sense" | "Walk me through your thinking here" |
| "You need a thesis" | "What's the main point you want readers to take away?" |
Efficiency Strategies
For Large Classes
- •Use rubrics consistently
- •Create comment banks for common issues
- •Audio/video feedback (often faster than writing)
- •Peer review for formative feedback
- •Focus grading on selected criteria
- •Grade samples, not everything
Comment Bank Examples
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THESIS ISSUES: - "Your thesis tells me what the paper is about but doesn't take a position. Try: 'Although X, Y because Z.'" - "This thesis is too broad. Can you narrow to a specific aspect?" EVIDENCE ISSUES: - "Good evidence, but I need your analysis. What does this quote prove?" - "This claim needs support. What source could back this up?" ORGANIZATION: - "Nice paragraph, but it might fit better after [section]. See what you think." - "I need a transition here to understand how we got from A to B."
Audio/Video Feedback
Benefits:
- •Faster than writing (often 2-3x)
- •Conveys tone better
- •Feels more personal
- •Can screencast while scrolling
Tips:
- •Keep under 5 minutes
- •Start with overview, then specifics
- •Reference specific locations
- •End with priorities
Growth Mindset Language
| Fixed Mindset | Growth Mindset |
|---|---|
| "You're not good at this" | "This skill takes practice" |
| "This is wrong" | "This doesn't quite work yet" |
| "You don't understand" | "Let's work on understanding" |
| "Smart students get this" | "This is challenging for everyone" |
References
- •
references/rubric-templates.md- Ready-to-use rubrics - •
references/comment-bank.md- Reusable feedback comments - •
references/peer-review-protocols.md- Peer review activities