ABSTRACT
Student self-assessment has been framed as a way to address the issues of power in assessment in higher education. However, rarely has self-assessment been used to challenge the broader political issues of grading. In this study, I introduce the concept of summative self-assessment, drawing on self-grading as a practice that seeks to disrupt the usual power relations of assessment. The summative self-assessment model was implemented in the context of undergraduate mathematics, after which 26 students were interviewed. Using three theoretical frameworks of power, an elaborative coding process was conducted to examine how students’ conceptions of summative self-assessment reflected either empowerment or disempowerment. The results underline the complexity of disrupting the power relationships in assessment from inside the system, calling for systemic changes in grading mechanisms.
Acknowledgements
I would like to thank Jokke Häsä from the DISA project for his great contribution as the inventor of the research design of this study, and Johanna Rämö for their supervision in the same project. Also, I warmly express my gratitude to Anette Bagger, Chris Dite, Juulia Lahdenperä and Alexis Padilla for our fruitful conversations and for their comments on the manuscript. Finally, I greatly thank the reviewers for their insightful comments on the earlier version of the manuscript, and the participants of the study for enabling this research.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).