Texting between students in exams should not be banned but rather actively encouraged, according to聽academics behind one of聽the most detailed explorations of聽the issue to聽date.
Researchers in South Africa looked at what would happen if聽students were given access to聽mobile instant messaging services and could communicate with their peers while working out the answers to聽test questions.
The study鈥檚 authors say that as the ability to solve problems through interaction with others is a skill widely sought by employers, the long-established notion that exchanging messages during exams is cheating may need to be reconsidered, particularly because collaborating remotely to find solutions has become ever more important in light of the Covid-19 pandemic.
As a first step, researchers Cecile Janse van聽Rensburg, Stephen Coetzee and Astrid Schmulian developed a bespoke instant messaging service to use during several types of assessment 鈥 essays, calculations and multiple-choice tests 鈥 in the University of Pretoria鈥檚 accounting department. All the tests had traditionally been sat in an invigilated pen-and-paper environment, but they were conducted online because of the pandemic.
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Not every student joined the discussion on the messaging service, with participation ranging from 40聽per cent聽to 71聽per cent, depending on the type of assessment. But students鈥 feedback was largely positive, with 79聽per cent of students saying they had read the messages and 74聽per cent reporting that they would like to use instant messaging in future assessments.
About six in 10 said the instant messages had improved their understanding of the question or the content, and 45聽per cent reported having changed their answers as a result of a communication.
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Analysis of the exchanges conducted by the researchers indicated that students鈥 messages most commonly sought to organise 鈥渆xisting knowledge鈥 and 鈥渆stablish common ground鈥, but there was also evidence of 鈥渆xtending knowledge and collaborative problem-solving鈥, often via 鈥渁rgumentative鈥 messages.
The study authors told 探花视频 that lecturers should be more open-minded towards the use of instant messaging during assessments.
鈥淲hile we acknowledge that there is a time and a place for high-stakes individual assessments of knowledge, particularly for certification purposes in professional higher education, we believe that a programme of assessment should also include assessment for learning and not only assessment of learning,鈥 they said.
鈥淥ur students will be faced with high-stakes decisions and situations one day in practice, where they will seek the inputs of聽others, and it聽was this scenario that we attempted to recreate in making our assessments more authentic.鈥
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The results of the Pretoria experiment have been published in .
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Do show your work 鈥 to others
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