Authors
Anastasiya Umarova, David Boud, Phillip Dawson, Rola Ajjawi
Description
A sociocultural view casts feedback as a process that is influenced by context and prior experiences. Yet few have investigated how past feedback experiences shape current student engagement in feedback.
The aim of this paper is to interrogate the feedback histories of students to find out how prior experiences with feedback frame their attitude to and use of feedback in current postgraduate courses. To do this, reflexive thematic analysis was conducted on qualitative data gained from interviews and longitudinal audio diaries.