Teacher judgement accuracy of technical abilities in primary education

Publication date

2023-04

Authors

Wammes, Dannie
Slof, BertISNI 000000039431300X
Schot, WillemijnISNI 0000000391693772
Kester, LiesbethISNI 0000000393938999

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

Accurate teacher judgements can enhance pupils' learning about science and technology. This study explored primary school teachers' judgements about their pupils' ability to reconstruct an electrical and a mechanical system. The judgement accuracy of most teachers was poor, gender-biased, and underestimation was more common than overestimation. The teachers’ gender or self-efficacy beliefs do not seem to affect their judgement accuracy, whereas greater technical knowledge and teaching experience might be beneficial. The teachers’ judgements were primarily based on their estimation of pupils’ cognitive abilities and learning behaviour, which both had less bearing on pupils’ performance than the teachers had expected. Diagnostic tasks for technical abilities, like the ones used in this study, can be used by primary school teachers working with children aged nine and above to calibrate their judgement accuracy and adapt their teaching to their pupils’ varying levels of prior knowledge. Pupils’ performance on these non-verbal tasks can reveal unexpected abilities.

Keywords

Engineering, Formative assessment, Judgement accuracy, Primary education

Citation

Wammes, D, Slof, B, Schot, W & Kester, L 2023, 'Teacher judgement accuracy of technical abilities in primary education', International Journal of Technology and Design Education, vol. 33, no. 2, pp. 415–438. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10798-022-09734-5