“Oral exam is an art form” – Danish Upper Secondary Students Attending Oral Exams in History and English

  • Julie Marie Isager

    Research output: Contribution to conference without publisher/journalPaperResearchpeer-review

    Abstract

    The presentation focuses on oral examination in Danish upper secondary high school from a student
    perspective. Since official law documents regarding oral exams are vague about what the exams are
    assessing, the aim of the paper is to investigate case-students’ processes preparing for the oral
    exams and their investigations of its criteria. Theoretical concepts are Bitzer’s Rhetorical situation’s
    demand for a ‘fitting response’(Bitzer, 1968), and Moje’s concept of student navigations in a
    disciplinary literacy-framework (Moje, 2013). By analyzing data from a five-month fieldwork covering
    student interviews, students’ written notes, classroom and exam observation, I ask: What is a fitting
    response at the oral exam in the disciplines of History and English? How do students navigate the
    complexities of the exam response?
    In oral History-exam, the student gets 10-15 pages of unknown historical source material and has 24
    hours of preparation to define questions and answer them in a presentation and a dialogue with two
    teacher-assessors for 20 minutes. Oral exam in English gives the student 60 minutes to read and
    analyze an unknown English text before the exam.
    Oral examinations have only been researched sporadically in Denmark (Nissen, 2019) and only
    scattered internationally (Dobson, 2007; Joughin, 2003; Kvifte, 2011; Maugesten, 2011). The
    contribution of this study is to investigate the complexities of the intersection and transition
    between classroom teaching and assessment.
    Results show that students struggle to express what a fitting exam response is. One case-student
    navigates the policy documents and the stated criteria in the classroom context, while the second
    case-student navigates by observing classroom interactions and feels criteria rather than expresses
    them. The third case-student was frustrated since neither documents or classroom practices were
    useful in her navigation towards a fitting exam response. Respecting the disciplinary boundaries
    proved important, even though this was never stated.
    Translated title of the contribution"Mundtlig eksamen er en kunst" - Danske gymnasieelever til mundtlig eksamen i Historie og Engelsk
    Original languageEnglish
    Publication date11. Aug 2021
    Number of pages3
    Publication statusPublished - 11. Aug 2021
    EventQUINT PhD Summer Institute 2021 - University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
    Duration: 30. Aug 20211. Sept 2021
    https://www.uv.uio.no/quint/english/news-and-events/events/conferences-and-seminars/2021/phd-summer-institute/programme/index.html

    Conference

    ConferenceQUINT PhD Summer Institute 2021
    LocationUniversity of Oslo
    Country/TerritoryNorway
    CityOslo
    Period30/08/202101/09/2021
    Internet address

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