two women talking one with a laptop open

Providing Feedback

Feedback is a key component of the assessment process. For students to improve their skills and academic performance, they need to receive effective feedback and use it to improve their subsequent work. 

Take a moment to think about feedback from an instructor, supervisor, or mentor that has helped you deepen your knowledge or strengthen a skill. How was their feedback delivered? Was their feedback provided periodically throughout the course of an assignment or on a final product? How did you use their feedback in subsequent work? 

In this section, we take a look at the components of effective feedback to help you deliver feedback that can lead to student improvement. 

elements of effective feedback

Effective feedback informs students of how to direct their efforts to improve their mastery of a concept or skill. To achieve this, the authors of How Learning Works: Seven Research-Based Principles for Smart Teaching (Ambrose et al., 2010) suggest that feedback should communicate the following to students:

  • What they currently do and not not understand
  • Where they’ve demonstrated mastery of a concept or skill and where they can improve
  • How to build off of their success and improve next time

These three pieces of information help students identify where they are currently at in their learning process and where they should direct future efforts. Effective feedback contains both positive reinforcement and critique framed through a growth mindset. 

In addition to the components explained above, feedback should be aligned with course goalstargeted, and timely. Aligning feedback to course objectives (and being transparent about this alignment) will help students understand the reasoning behind your suggestions for improvement. For example, if it is an objective for students to be able to connect a historical text to a modern event, then your feedback should be framed around how students succeeded at meeting this objective and how they can improve. Helpful feedback is targeted, meaning that it prioritizes the aspects of an assignment that students most need to focus on—choose just 2-3 areas of student performance to highlight in your feedback (this will also save you time!). Finally, feedback is most useful when it is provided soon after the completion of an assignment and when there will be opportunities to demonstrate growth. Feedback provided on an outline will help students improve their paper drafts, but feedback on an essay due at the end of a semester has limited ability to influence future student performance. When feedback (or feedforward) is provided to students on works in-progress it is termed “forward-looking”, whereas feedback on final products is termed “backward-looking”. Unless it’s required by the primary instructor of your course, we don’t recommend that TAs spend time giving feedback on end of semester products.

types of feedback

Here, we review categories of feedback that can be used together to clearly communicate how students can improve future work (Leibold and Schwarz, 2015):

Corrective feedback identifies the assignment expectations that students have and have not met (make sure that you’ve made these expectations clear before the students begin an assignment; see below for a discussion of rubrics). 

Epistemic (relating to knowledge) feedback encourages students to push their understanding of a concept to the next level, asking students to clarify a particular point or to more comprehensively explore an idea. 

Suggestive feedback provides advice for how students might address either corrective or epistemic feedback. Epistemic and suggestive feedback are particularly useful when used together, where instructors can highlight an area that deserves further exploration and give advice on how to go about this exploration. 

To see examples of these types of feedback and practice writing your own, check out this editable table.

feedback modality

Feedback is perhaps most commonly provided to students as written notes. However, you can consider alternative forms of feedback that might save you time, be more personal, and help you deliver the intended intonation to students:

Video/Audio feedback. You might find that you can more quickly explain your ideas than write them out. This kind of feedback can be particularly helpful if you have few other opportunities to talk to your students individually, such as in large or online classes.

1:1 or small group meetings. Meetings allow students to ask questions about your feedback in the moment. This can enhance student agency by turning feedback from something that is passively received into a conversation. Holding small group meetings can give students opportunities to interact and learn from each other while saving time. You can also ask students about the feedback itself and ask them to plan how they will implement it. 

Rubrics as feedback. Providing students with rubrics will make the feedback process easier for you and the assignment more transparent to students. Students should know exactly what is expected of them before they begin an assignment and why. Use your rubrics to lay out details of an assignment and connect them back to larger course objectives. You can also co-construct rubrics with your students to increase agency and to get them involved in thinking about core components of an assignment and how they relate to course content. See a rubric for creating rubrics here and check out this document for a detailed description of creating rubrics.

Creating a Culture of Feedback

Students need to have a positive experience with feedback in order to be open to receiving it and thinking critically about how it can be implemented. This doesn’t mean that feedback can’t contain constructive criticism, but it does mean that you and your students will benefit from creating a positive culture around feedback. 

Steps for creating a culture of feedback:

  • Normalize feedback. Make sure that students understand that feedback is meant to help them improve and is not meant as criticism. Be transparent about how your feedback is directing students towards achieving the course objectives.
  • Have conversations about feedback. Allow students to ask questions about your feedback. Ask your students about which aspects of the feedback they find the most helpful and which they need more assistance in understanding.
  • Use peer review on an assignment. This allows students to practice providing feedback, think more explicitly about how to meet assignment expectations, and see other examples of work.
  • Elicit feedback on your teaching from your students. This opens up a two-way flow of feedback, signaling to your class that you are open to receiving and using feedback and that you value their input. 
  • Make the use of feedback part of an assignment. For example, if students are working on a final draft of a paper that they had previously received feedback on, have them write a short statement about how they’ve addressed feedback from the first draft. 

More Tips on Giving Feedback

Parts of this section were adapted from: https://ctl.columbia.edu/resources-and-technology/resources/feedback-for-learning/

equity-based principle: transparency

Effective feedback increases student awareness of expectations for performance. Tools such as rubrics allow students to understand the criteria for success, and constructive feedback clearly outlines what topics students have mastered and which they need to revisit.