Research-based assessment affordances and constraints: Perceptions of physics faculty
Adrian Madsen, Sarah B. McKagan, Mathew "Sandy" Martinuk, Alexander, Bell, and Eleanor C. Sayre

TL;DR
This study explores physics faculty perceptions of research-based assessments, identifying practical needs, perceived limitations, community support desires, and contextual factors influencing assessment use.
Contribution
It provides a detailed phenomenographic analysis of faculty perceptions, highlighting specific needs and constraints to improve adoption of research-based assessments.
Findings
Faculty want practical guidance on assessment implementation.
Faculty perceive limitations of current assessments in measuring relevant skills.
Faculty desire community support for interpreting assessment results.
Abstract
To help faculty use research-based materials in a more significant way, we learn about their perceived needs and desires and use this information to suggest ways for the Physics Education Research community to address these needs. When research-based resources are well aligned with the perceived needs of faculty, faculty members will more readily take them up. We used phenomenographic interviews of ordinary physics faculty and department chairs to identify four families of issues that faculty have around research-based assessments (RBA). First, many faculty are interested in using RBAs but have practical needs around how to do so: how to find them, which ones there are, and how to administer them. They want help addressing these needs. Second, at the same time, many faculty think that RBAs are limited and don't measure many of the things they care about, or aren't applicable in their…
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