[University home]

Centre for Formative Assessment Studies (CFAS)

Research

The Centre for Formative Assessment Studies (CFAS) was founded in 1988.  Its basic conceptualisation was (and remains) the support of teaching, learning and assessment at a range of levels.

At the micro level our aim is to enable teachers to support pupil learning through understanding the inter-changeable roles of the teacher and the learner in the classroom; to develop teachers' understanding of the integrated process of teaching, learning and assessment and of the ways in which assessment strategies such as specific feedback, self and peer assessment can contribute to a supportive and deeper learning process for the pupil.  We welcome approaches from schools for collaboration, for support or for formative evaluation projects.  Throughout the post-Education Reform Act (1988) decade and the accountability culture of the New Labour Standards' agenda, CFAS has strongly advocated the principles of formative assessment (assessment for learning[DVD]).

At the macro level, these principles have permeated our work in our inputs and advice to national (DfES, QCA) and international (World Bank, UNESCO, Asian Development Bank, Department for International Development, Ministries of Education) policymakers, funders and academic conferences.

Our research methodologies have covered a range of assessment developments, disseminations and evaluations and qualitative and quantitative curriculum surveys, analyses and reporting.

Latest publications from CFAS

Boyle B & Bragg J. (2008) The relationship between disadvantage and primary school performance standards. Primary Leadership Today, Issue 11, Vol 2.

Boyle B & Bragg J. (2008) What is the point of homework? A survey into Homework using pupil and parental voice. Primary Leadership Today, Issue 11, Vol 2.

Boyle B & Bragg J. (2008) Making Primary Connections  the cross curriculum story. Curriculum Journal, Vol 19, No 1 pp3-18.

Conference presentations

Bill Boyle recently presented a key note lecture 'Holistic assessment: a model without status in the assessment in England' to the International Education Colloquium on Holisitic Assessment in Kuching, Malaysia 4-7 May 2008. 

Joanna Bragg, as a member of the research team alongside colleagues Amanda Barton and Ludovica Serratrice from the School of Education, will present findings from the project 'Discovering Languages'  which is an evaluation of language awareness in primary schools funded by the Esmee Fairbairn Foundation. The project Director, Peter Downes from the Association of School and College Leaders will present the background rationale and expectations of the project and one of the teachers who has been delivering the programme will report on her experiences.

Multi-lingual awareness in primary schools, Language World, Association for Language Learning, Oxford (11-12 April 2008).