Velg Training want to make your life easier! Custom designed products, created with precision and care, have been designed especially for you. All of our ready-to-use templates and webinar recordings are now available in one easy-to-find place.
One Month Left to Secure Early Bird Pricing
Jun 6, 2019
Updates from the National VET Regulator
Jun 6, 2019
Are You 2020 Ready?
Jun 6, 2019
Rethinking and Revitalising Tertiary Education
Jun 6, 2019
Demonstrating Vocational Competency Tool
Jun 6, 2019
SMEs Sought for Various Industry Projects
Jun 6, 2019
On the Topic of EI – One of the Core Units in Leadership and Management
Jun 6, 2019
NCVER Launches 2019 National Student Outcomes Survey
Jun 6, 2019
Taking Part is About More than Winning a Medal
Jun 6, 2019
VET Newsletters – 6 June 2019
Jun 6, 2019
Latest Publications – 6 June 2019
Jun 6, 2019
Media Releases – 6 June 2019
Jun 6, 2019
We hope you’ve enjoyed this abridged version of our weekly Member eNews.
Jun 6, 2019
The importance of interpersonal skills, and the challenges in developing and assessing them, will be explored at ACER’s Research Conference 2019 in Melbourne in August.
Speaking ahead of the conference, ACER Principal Research Fellow, Neville Chiavaroli said that skills in the interpersonal domain go by many names, such as collaboration, cooperation, teamwork, empathy, and verbal and non-verbal communication. He highlights the strong influence of context, including cultural context, on developing and assessing these skills.
‘Good interpersonal skills involve insight, understanding, and the kind of social awareness that helps one determine what might be an ‘appropriate’ response in a given situation. There can be no set rules for determining this, much to the frustration of teachers and students alike,’ Chiavaroli said.
According to Victoria University Research Fellows Esther Doecke and Quentin Maire, a lack of evidence on how students build interpersonal skills makes it difficult to determine how best to teach them. They suggest the development of 21st century skills in schools is most likely to be nurtured by deliberate approaches to teaching and learning, where students are given rich and varied opportunities and contexts within which to improve them.
Doecke and Maire note that students’ collaborative skills are considered as increasingly important to solve complex problems, and that this link offers a way to incorporate the skill into teaching and learning.
‘Results from the PISA collaborative problem solving assessment suggest that social activities, safe and supportive school environments and physical education can play an important role in helping students collaborate,’ Doecke and Maire said.
In terms of how interpersonal skills can be assessed, Chiavaroli, Doecke and Maire point to three methods currently used within education contexts: self-report, direct assessment in a simulated task, and teacher observation and judgement.
‘Different methods of assessment tap into different aspects of a construct and provide a fuller perspective of student achievement,’ Doecke and Maire said.
Chiavaroli advises educators to resist the temptation to simply reach for the most common or convenient assessment format available. Drawing on his extensive background in medical education and assessment, he says three key considerations to be made are: (1) how the skill is conceptualised; (2) the contextual basis of the assessment; and (3) the importance of authenticity.
‘In the field of medical education, the concept of empathy has become central to representing the particular interpersonal understandings and skills expected of students and practising doctors,’ Chiavaroli said.
‘Medical education’s attempts to enact authentic, aligned and valid assessments of empathy can provide a useful example for school classrooms faced with the challenge of assessing the interpersonal skills of students.’
To view the original article, see the ACER website.
Date posted Jun 6, 2019
Need some help? Visit our help section to get answers to your questions.
Our vision is to educate, inspire, and empower by providing quality, flexible and innovative products and services - the Velg Training membership program is no exception. Packed full of exclusive benefits, our membership program provides access to a range of member-only privileges. Watch now to hear more about these privileges!
Benefit from a free Velg Training profile and receive our fortnightly newsletter
All the great benefits of membership extend to the named individual
Benefits extended to unlimited sibling accounts
+
Account administrator to manage team
+
Track sibling PD history