Skip to main page content.
Skip to site navigation.
Skip to section quick links.

PASS.

Programme Assessment Strategies

Welcome to the PASS project

1 October 2009 - 31 July 2012

Funded by the HE Academy's NTFS project strand, this project confronts a fundamental issue for every HE course/programme leader: how to design an effective, efficient, inclusive and sustainable assessment strategy which delivers the key course/programme outcomes.

Focussing on programme level assessment, we redress the current imbalance where assessment issues are primarily investigated and discussed at module/unit level. 

Assessment is both a major driver to student learning and significant source of student satisfaction/dissatisfaction. Currently, programme leaders cannot access suitable evidence-based guidance and exemplars/examples to develop and implement effective cross-programme or programme-based assessment strategies. This project will develop the appropriate evidence base and framework across a range of major subject disciplines.

Building on the extensive experience within partner institutions (including 2 assessment-focused CETLs), we will identify essential principles of programme-based assessment and use these to implement and test the effectiveness of programme assessment strategies.

The project will deliver:

Programme Assessment Strategies (PASS)

Contents

Accessibility

Colour Options



Latest news

(External) View RSS feed

Partner institutions

University of Bradford

(External)

(External)

(External)

(External)

(External)

(External)

National Teaching Fellowship Scheme Projects.

Contact us

Email:: pass@bradford.ac.uk
Tel: +44 (0)1274 233336
University of Bradford, Bradford, West Yorkshire, BD7 1DP, UK

Disclaimer: This page may include links to information provided by external services that are not in any way under the control of the University of Bradford.
The University cannot, therefore, be held responsible for its content or accuracy.
Copyright © University of Bradford

Change Text Only Settings

Graphic version of this page