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Closing the loop on student feedback: the case of Australian and Scottish universities

journal contribution
posted on 2018-07-04, 00:00 authored by Mahsood Shah, M Cheng, R Fitzgerald
Universities have a long history of collecting student feedback using surveys and other mechanisms. The last decade has witnessed a significant shift in how student feedback is systematically collected, analysed, reported, and used by governments and institutions. This shift is due to a number of factors, including changes in government policy related to quality assurance, and the increased use of the results by various stakeholders such as governments, institutions, and potential students and employers. The collection, analysis, and reporting of results are systematically carried out in many institutions worldwide. However, how to use student feedback to effectively improve student learning experience remains an issue to be addressed. This paper will contribute to this debate by comparing how Australian and Scottish universities use student feedback results to inform improvements. Based on thematic analysis of external quality audit reports of all Australian and Scottish universities, this paper suggests that universities have systematic processes to collect student feedback using a range of mechanisms, but limited work is done to use the data to inform improvements. This paper argues the need for universities to genuinely listen to student voice by facilitating partnership between students and institutions to act on their feedback as part of quality assurance.

History

Volume

74

Issue

1

Start Page

115

End Page

129

Number of Pages

15

eISSN

1573-174X

ISSN

0018-1560

Publisher

Springer Verlag

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

Higher Education

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