John B. Biggs

John Burville Biggs AM (born 25 October 1934) is an Australian educational psychologist and novelist who developed the SOLO taxonomy for assessing the quality of learning outcomes, and the model of constructive alignment for designing teaching and assessment.[1][2]

John Biggs
Born
John Burville Biggs

(1934-10-25) 25 October 1934 (age 89)
Hobart, Australia
Alma materUniversity of Tasmania (BA)
University of London (PhD)
Known forStructure of observed learning outcomes
Constructive alignment
Scientific career
FieldsEducational psychology
InstitutionsUniversity of Hong Kong
ThesisThe psychological relationship between cognitive and affective factors in arithmetical performance (1962)
Websitewww.johnbiggs.com.au

Education

After studying psychology at the University of Tasmania (BA, 1957),[3] he moved to the UK for doctoral studies at the University of London where he was awarded a PhD in 1962.[4]

Career and research

Biggs has held university faculty positions in Australia, Canada, the United Kingdom, and Hong Kong. His final institutional affiliation is as Honorary Professor of Psychology at the University of Hong Kong. His most influential work is his concept of constructive alignment, which is an outcomes-based framework for university teaching as described in Teaching for Quality Learning at University published in its fourth edition with Catherine Tang as co-author in 2011.[5] Changing Universities[6] is an academic memoir covering nearly 60 years of involvement with universities in several countries, and in that time universities themselves have changed drastically.

Awards and honours

Biggs was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) in the 2017 Queen's Birthday Honours.[7] On 23 February 2022 he was awarded the Universities Australia Australian Awards for University Teaching Career Achievement Award.[8]

Personal life

Since retiring from academic life, Biggs has published short stories and four novels, The Girl in the Golden House,[9] Project Integrens,[10] Disguises[11] and Tin Dragons.[12] Tasmania Over Five Generations [13] is a social-political history of Tasmania as seen through the eyes of five generations of his own family. Towards Forgiveness: Sino-Tasmanian stories from two islands[14] is a collection of short stories. His 2013 novel was From Ashes to Ashes.[15]

References