Instructor and students reviewing course material.

Lesson 6: Working with feedback

Increasing feedback literacy

Diagram of the feedback loop between instructor and student

One of the benefits of testing is the feedback that it provides students about their current performance; however, research also suggests that the feedback provided is not used by the students (Jørgensen, 2019). Helping students use feedback literacy refers to a student’s ability to interpret feedback so they can evaluate and adjust their behaviours. Feedback should be an active dialogue between instructors and students, and should not be passively received. 

Students with a fixed mindset are more likely to respond defensively to feedback that destabilizes their self-concept (Forsythe & Johnson, 2017). Students with a fixed mindset are less likely to engage with feedback as they believe that changes will not impact performance. They are also more likely to have an affective response to feedback that challenges their self-concept (Kaur et al., 2018). 

Students are less likely to engage with feedback when:

  • Feedback doesn’t reflect the grade assigned   

  • Feedback threatens student’s self-concept  

  • Feedback is error focused  

  • Feedback uses disciplinary language or academic language  

  • Feedback has little to no connection to the next assessment  

Students are more likely to engage with feedback when:

  • Feedback is emphasized over grade  

  • Feedback empowers students’ agency  

  • Feedback explains why answers are correct or incorrect  

  • Feedback is future-focused and can be applied to the next assessment  

  • Feedback clarifies the gap between performance and expectation  

  • Feedback is presented as an ongoing process that one moment in time  

Feedback infographic

Reflection questions:

Take a moment to think about your current feedback process, particularly for tests. What elements of your current feedback process would encourage students to engage? What elements might you want to change or adapt to?


Lesson checklist

After this lesson, you will be able to: 

  • Understand challenges to student use of feedback and the need for feedback literacy  

  • Develop a plan to encourage student self-assessment before, during, and after testing

More lessons

Students sitting in a classroom, visibly frustrated

Lesson 1: Understanding test anxiety

Student sitting at a desk, frustrated, thinking of a test

Lesson 2: Identifying and responding to test anxiety

Student sitting at a desk on laptop, instructor teaching from a laptop

Lesson 3: Talking about tests