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Featured researches published by Suzanne Taylor.


International Technology, Education and Development Conference | 2016

ENHANCEMENT OF AUSTRALIA’S GLOBALLY ENGAGED UNIVERSITY SECTOR: BRIDGING CULTURES AND TRANSFORMING STUDENT LEARNING AND ASSESSMENT IN ACCOUNTING

Suzanne Taylor; Mary Ryan; Jon M. Pearce; Leonie Elphinstone

Internationalisation is of growing significance worldwide, with economic, political and social changes driving an increasingly global knowledge economy. At the heart of this internationalisation process is the significant increase in the global population of students who move to another country to study which more than doubled from the 2.1 million internationally mobile students in 2000, to a figure of 5 million in 2014 and with OECD projected figures of 8 million students by 2025. Higher education is therefore becoming a major driver of economic competitiveness and Australian state and federal governments have clearly articulated that education is a major export product. Business schools, and in particular, accounting units, play a major role in the delivery of this product. Maintaining the competitive edge has, however, seen an increase in public accountability of higher education institutions through the mechanism of ranking universities based on the quality of their teaching and learning outcomes. As a result, assessment processes are under scrutiny, creating tensions between standardisation and measurability and the development of creative and reflective learners. These tensions are further highlighted in the context of large undergraduate subjects, learner diversity and time-poor academics and students. This article reports on a two-phase, cross-institution and cross-discipline project which sought to investigate the capacity of innovative assessment design to provide some measure of relief from these tensions. Underlying both phases of the project is the research supported belief that high level and complex learning is best developed when assessment, combined with effective feedback practices, involves students as partners in these processes. In Phase One, and using a social constructivist view of learning, which emphasises the role of both teacher and learner in the development of complex cognitive understandings, we undertook an iterative process of peer review. A major learning from the first phase was that, while all students find it difficult to reflect in deep and meaningful ways unless they are provided with appropriate scaffolding, for international students, the cognitive demands are increased as they also try to negotiate the language and cultural nuances of the task. Both the staff observations and the more than six hundred, reflection-based, student survey responses received, highlighted that our initial project had not determined/analysed how students with English as a second language actually responded to and managed the peer review interactions with other students. Also of concern was the growing tension within the peer review process with local students generally unhappy with both the low quality of the drafts they were asked to review and the low quality of the reviews they received from students they perceived as international. Thus, this paper concludes with an overview of the proposed, Phase Two, validated model (i.e. independently tested by external, partner institutions), designed by the research team to enhance the development of culturally enriched and reflective assessment resources and strategies for use not only in peer review-based assessment tasks, but, rather, across a range of assessment tasks including team/group work.


QUT Business School | 2011

Helping undergraduate students across disciplines and cultures actively engage and collaborate as equal members of a community of scholars : peer review within an e-learning environment

Suzanne Taylor


QUT Business School; School of Accountancy | 2017

Could we nationalise the superannuation system even if we wanted to

Suzanne Taylor


QUT Business School; School of Accountancy | 2017

Accountability in regulatory reform: Australia's superannuation industry paradox

Suzanne Taylor; Anthony Asher; Julie-Anne Tarr


QUT Business School; Faculty of Education | 2017

Enhancing integration within Australia’s globally engaged university sector: Bridging cultures and transforming student learning and assessment in accounting

Suzanne Taylor; Mary Ryan; Jon M. Pearce; Leonie Elphinstone


QUT Business School; Faculty of Education | 2016

Enhancement of Australia’s globally engaged university sector: bridging cultures and transforming student learning and assessment in accounting.

Suzanne Taylor; Mary Ryan; Jon M. Pearce; Leonie Elphinstone


QUT Business School | 2016

Australia's flawed Regulatory Impact Statement (RIS) process

Suzanne Taylor; Julie-Anne Tarr; Anthony Asher


QUT Business School | 2016

Sharpening Regulation in the Australian Superannuation Industry to Ensure Compatibility of Public and Private Objectives

Suzanne Taylor; Anthony Asher; Julie-Anne Tarr


QUT Business School | 2011

Transferring knowledge through peer-reviewed assessment : the creation of a community of practice and the threats to its survival

Suzanne Taylor


QUT Business School | 2007

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Anthony Asher

University of New South Wales

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Julie-Anne Tarr

Queensland University of Technology

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Mary Ryan

Queensland University of Technology

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