Rotman Management

FEEDBACK: The Broken Loop in Higher Education – and How to Fix It

WHEN WE WANT TO LEARN a new skill in life, we try out a new behaviour. Some behaviours fulfill their intended purpose, while others do not. Feedback — signals from the environment that tell us whether or not the behaviour we produced had the intended effect — is essential to changing, adapting or modifying human behaviour. This is what learning is all about.

Whether or not a skill can be reproduced by an algorithm, learning any skill requires feedback and is essential to the measurement of learning. In the skills environment of the Fourth Industrial Revolution — wherein information is free and complex, interpersonal skills whose development requires textured, precise, timely personalized feedback have become the highest value contributions to human capital. The result: Feedback has become the critical missing link in higher education.

Learning Science and Practice: A Picture Emerges

The science of learning and teaching offers abundant evidence of the critical link between feedback and learning. In recent years, it has come to focus on identifying the right kinds of feedback for different people and learning environments: Whether you are learning a foreign language or a computer language; learning to supress impulses; or learning to communicate coherently, empathically and responsively — each requires specific types and sequences of feedback.

Timeliness, precision, intelligibility, actionability, repetition — all represent features of learning-enhancing and enabling feedback across different domains of knowledge, skill and expertise. The discipline of machine learning has made rapid advances in the last 10 years precisely because of its use of fast mechanisms that

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Rotman Management

Rotman Management8 min read
Management: Philosophy in Action
LOOKING BACK OVER MY CAREER, I sometimes I think of a roller-coaster as an analogy for the relative arbitrariness of a career: there are ups and downs, not necessarily related to personal effort or work. Today’s success does not guarantee tomorrow’s
Rotman Management6 min read
In an Era of Digital Everything, Is Lean Still Relevant?
NO ONE WOULD argue that digital technologies are taking the world by storm. Spending on these technologies and services worldwide was US$1.85 trillion in 2022 — a 185 per cent increase over the last five years. Undoubtedly, digital tools have shifted
Rotman Management6 min readSmall Business & Entrepreneurs
Q&A
Think about a start-up, but at scale. An archetypal tech start-up is an egalitarian band of people on a mission. It’s not terribly hierarchical — people do whatever needs to be done, but they’re all pointed in the same direction. They keep iterating

Related