1st Edition

Using Rubrics as Feedback Mechanisms for Doctoral Supervisors and Researchers

Edited By Peter Grainger, Craig Johnston, Chahna Gonsalves Copyright 2027
184 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

184 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This book examines the use of formative rubrics as a feedback mechanism in doctoral education, redefining rubrics as formative assessment artefacts as well as summative scoring methods. Grainger, Johnston and Gonsalves bring together insights from globally recognised experts to position rubrics as formative assessment criteria-based tools that provide feedback to guide both supervisors and... Read more

Chapter 1 Introduction:  A need for reform

Peter Grainger

 

Chapter 2 Adapting doctoral assessment to the pedagogy of the doctoral journey while maintaining diversity

 Pam Denicolo

 

Chapter 3 Reimagining Rubrics in Doctoral Education: From Evaluation Instruments to Tools for Teaching, Learning, and Supervision

Heidi Andrade and Elie ChingYen Yu

 

Chapter 4 Making connections: a UK perspective on how rubric-specific formative feedback can improve the doctoral researcher experience and outcomes

Gillian Houston

 

Chapter 5 It’s all about me: Guiding self-reflection of doctoral students to a state of critical being Christine Edwards-Leis

 

Chapter 6 Making the Rules Visible: Hidden Curricula, Epistemic Validity, and the Design of Doctoral Rubrics

Chahna Gonsalves

 

Chapter 7 Making Visible Quality Standards for Theses in Higher Education

Michelle Jacobsen

 

Chapter 8 Testing a formative feedback rubric as a means of scaffolding and engineering generative AI responses for doctoral candidates

Craig Johnston and Suzanne Barry

 

Chapter 9 Evaluating a Formative Rubric for Doctoral Education: Insights from the F.A.C.T.

Peter Grainger, Christine Edwards-Leis, Joseph Scott, Michael Carey, Melinda Dean

 

Chapter 10 Conclusion: Rubrics, doctoral assessment, and the future of doctorateness

 Anders Jönsson and Ernesto Panadero

Biography

Peter Grainger (PhD) is a Senior Lecturer in Education at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia. He is a prolific publisher of assessment related research, especially around the design and efficacy of rubrics in undergraduate and postgraduate education contexts, including doctoral education. His recent research focuses on feedback literacy of doctoral students and supervisors and the potential of formative assessment criteria-based tools (FACTs) to act as additional feedback mechanisms.

Craig Johnston (PhD) is an early career researcher at the University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia. His most recent research focuses on assessment rubrics, particularly the ways in which generative artificial intelligence (AI) can be used to as an alternate formative feedback tool for students.

Chahna Gonsalves (PhD) is a Senior Lecturer in Marketing (Education), at King’s College London, UK, where her research and scholarship focus on assessment and feedback, generative AI, communication, and message impact. Chahna is the Department Education Lead and a Senior Fellow of Advance HE.

"This superbly edited collection by Grainger, Johnston and Gonsalves is authored by international experts in the field of assessment. Providing a blueprint for change in the way we consider, design and apply rubrics to doctoral education is a much needed and timely contribution to the debate about the modern PhD"

- Karen Clegg, Reader in Doctoral Education in the School for Arts and Creative Technologies at the University of York and Co-PI/Director of the Next Generation Research SuperVision Project (RSVP), U.K.