Feedback Literacy

Feedback is not simply something given; it is something actively made sense of and used by learners.
— Carless & Boud (2018)

Understanding Feedback Literacy Through Real Examples

Short animations that bring feedback moments to life- watch, reflect, and build your confidence in navigating academic feedback.

Office Hours

Office Hours

July 8, 2025

This very short video introduces the importance of office hours as part of developing feedback literacy. It emphasises that office hours (often called student hours) are open to everyone, and they are a chance to ask questions, discuss feedback, clarify course material, or talk about academic concerns. The key message is that attending office hours

Closing the Peer Feedback Loop – Going a Step Further

Closing the Peer Feedback Loop – Going a Step Further

July 5, 2025

This video shows one student struggling to know how to fix their coding work, and zooms in on specific actions the student’s teacher and peer can take to help this student understand explicitly how to improve, with an emphasis on how students should conduct themselves when giving and receiving feedback.

Giving Collaborative Feedback

Giving Collaborative Feedback

July 5, 2025

This resource depicts a student, who is struggling with being heard in his group, and gives three possible responses he could take to the collaborative issues he is facing. It concludes that providing peers with collaborative feedback is an effective means of improving one’s experience with group work.

How to Ask About Feedback

How to Ask About Feedback

July 1, 2025

This video tackles the awkwardness of asking about feedback and offers simple, practical phrases for doing so in various ways. By modelling a few easy prompts, it empowers students to engage with feedback more confidently.

Dealing with Disagreement During Feedback

Dealing with Disagreement During Feedback

July 1, 2025

Disagreements in group projects are inevitable, but they can escalate into conflict when met with defensiveness. This video models how pausing for explanation and engaging in open dialogue can turn tension into collaboration.

When Feedback Is Not Clear

When Feedback Is Not Clear

July 1, 2025

This video contrasts two student approaches to feedback- one who asks immediately, and another who hesitates. It models how simple questions can transform unclear feedback into actionable insight.

Next

Understanding Feedback Literacy

We’re currently in the process of writing up our signature concepts paper. In the meantime, here are five of the most highly cited authors in the field whose work has shaped our thinking: Carless, Boud, Winstone, Molloy, and Nicol.

References

Work in progress.