Reciprocity and Power Dynamics: Community Members Gradings Students
This article explores the dynamic practice of inviting community members to grade college students on their work in community-engaged partnerships. The authors articulate theories of writing assessment with theories of reciprocity to argue that community-based student evaluations can be a valid and...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Reflections (Baltimore, Md.) Md.), 2017-10, Vol.17 (2) |
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container_title | Reflections (Baltimore, Md.) |
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creator | Shumake, Jessica Rachael Wendler Shah |
description | This article explores the dynamic practice of inviting community members to grade college students on their work in community-engaged partnerships. The authors articulate theories of writing assessment with theories of reciprocity to argue that community-based student evaluations can be a valid and ethical form of assessment, and discuss a case study in which local youth graded college students to offer eight best practices for implementing community-based assessment. As reciprocity is often underemphasized in practice, community evaluations provide a strategy for shifting power toward community members, potentially reinvigorating applications of reciprocity to make them more substantial and meaningful. |
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title | Reciprocity and Power Dynamics: Community Members Gradings Students |
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