Guide to Substantive Feedback

What is Substantive Feedback

Person reviewing and editing a document with red pen, focusing on substantive feedback for academic writing.

At Bryan University, providing students with quality feedback is paramount and a primary faculty interaction. As defined in the US Department of Education’s distance education standard (Federal Register, 2020), substantive feedback should: 

 

 

Substantive feedback tells students “what they are or are not understanding, where their performance is going well or poorly, and how they should direct their future efforts” (Ambrose et al., 2010, p. 137). Substantive feedback is detailed, specific, and actionable. It helps students understand exactly what they’ve done well and where they can improve. It goes beyond surface-level comments and provides meaningful insights into their work, fostering growth and development. 

Characteristics of Substantive Feedback

Substantive Feedback is:

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It pinpoints exactly what was done well and what needs adjustment. Instead of saying “Good work,” a substantive comment might be “Your argument is well-supported with evidence, but consider adding more examples to strengthen your conclusion.”

Illustration of a smiling woman with speech bubbles showing positive feedback words like "Nice," "Great," "Good," and "Perfect" for effective substantive feedback.

Constructive feedback acknowledges the student’s efforts and successes, which helps to motivate and build their confidence. For example,   “You did an excellent job analyzing the data; your interpretation is clear and insightful. Keep up this level of critical thinking in future assignments!” 

Illustration of a bar graph showing upward growth with the phrase "Continuous Improvement" on a chalkboard, emphasizing ongoing progress and development.

Feedback should pinpoint where the student can improve and offer clear advice on how to make those improvements. This might involve suggesting changes to specific sections, trying different approaches, or focusing on key content areas. For example, instead of just saying “Good thesis,” you might say, “Your thesis is strong. To improve, add more details in your supporting paragraphs and make sure they clearly connect to your thesis.” 

Visual of a narrative writing rubric used for providing substantive feedback in educational settings, highlighting key criteria like details, sequencing, grammar, and spelling.

When there is no rubric, feedback should clearly connect to the assignment’s instructions and goals to help the student see how their work meets the expected outcomes. For instance, if the assignment was to solve a set of problems using specific methods, you could say, “The assignment asked you to solve problems using both algebraic and geometric methods. You correctly used algebraic methods, but make sure to apply geometric methods as well to fully complete the assignment.” 

Key Considerations for Writing Effective Substantive Feedback

Personalization is key! 

All students should receive feedback that is specific to their individual work. Generic comments can be a starting point, but they should be supplemented with personalized insights to address the unique aspects of each student’s performance. 

Use Templates or Comment Libraries Wisely!

While templates and comment libraries can help streamline the feedback process, they should not replace personalized comments. Use templates or comment libraries as a base for common feedback areas, but always add specific details related to the student’s work. For example, if using a template comment like “Your introduction needs more detail,” tailor it by specifying which part of the introduction needs elaboration and how it can be improved. 

▶️Watch the following video to learn more about how to use templates wisely!

Approaches to Giving Substantive Feedback

Approach #1: The Compliment Sandwich Technique

Illustration of a cheeseburger representing elements of substantive feedback, including praise, constructive criticism, and support, aligned with the guide to effective feedback.

Step 1: Provide a Compliment! Make it sincere and specific! This can be something they did well, a strong point in their performance, or an aspect of their work that you genuinely appreciate! This positive reinforcement sets a supportive and encouraging tone.

Step 2: Offer Areas of Improvement and Constructive Feedback Identify areas of improvement. Be specific, clear and objective about what needs to be worked on. In this part of the sandwich, offers guidance on how to address these issues. Offer actionable suggestions for improvement. This is the meat of the sandwich! Note: If the student got a perfect score, don’t skip this section. Instead, offer additional resources that relate to the topic or explain how this assignment will build on future assignments. 

Step 3: Tie to Assignment (if no rubric provided) and End with another Compliment! Offer another positive comment or compliment about the student’s work! This helps to reinforce the idea that you value the individual’s efforts and believe in their potential for improvement.  If applicable, encourage the student to re-submit for mastery. 

Approach #2: Aligning Feedback with Course Learning Objectives (CLO)

Step 1

 Locate the CLOs in the syllabus. Each course has both course level outcomes (CLOs) as well as weekly objectives.

BU Resource Center image illustrating habits of successful students, focusing on study techniques and time management for academic achievement.

Step 2

Determine where the assignment you are leaving feedback for falls within the CLOs and/or weekly objectives. For example, how might you align the Week 5 Assignment, below, from UNV-101 to the CLOs?

BU Resource Center offers tools and tips for effective time and stress management to enhance academic success and well-being.

Your answer could be the CLO in the red box, but this assignment could possibly be satisfying the yellow box as well- that is up to you to decide how you assess the student’s work by aligning the work to the CLOs. Faculty are the Subject Matter Experts (SMEs), so you need to assess student performance against the CLOs provided and create your feedback based on the CLOs. 

BU Resource Center on Substantive Feedback for Students.

Step 3

Create a substantive feedback comment for the student assignment, using the compliment sandwich technique and addressing the student’s progress and CLOS mastery.  Here is an example for the assignment above. 

A student reviewing a calendar template to organize feedback and improve their academic performance, emphasizing the importance of structured planning in providing effective substantive feedback.

What if a Student gets a perfect score?

Student celebrating a high grade on a paper with an A+ at BU Resource Center, emphasizing effective feedback and academic success.

If a student gets a perfect score on their assignment, it’s important to celebrate their achievement with specific, meaningful praise. However, providing substantive feedback remains crucial, even for flawless work. 

Here’s what you can do: 

 

Substantive feedback, even on perfect work, helps students stay engaged and continue growing, rather than plateauing. It emphasizes that learning is an ongoing process, not just about getting the right answer. 

What about Auto-graded Assignments and Labs?

Does your class have assignments that Canvas auto grades or assignments/courseware like McGraw Hill Connect,  Cengage Mindtap, McGraw Hill, ALEKS, or any other “lab” courseware in which the students work inside the courseware, and not in Canvas? Individualized feedback is tough to record and track. What should you do?  Simple grade book comments in Canvas, when a student completes an assignment, let them know you have reviewed their work and that you “see” them in class. No student wants to think they are working in a vacuum and that their instructor thinks they are invisible. The best suggestion is to create overall assignment feedback for the Canvas Grade book that addresses the following:

 

Here is an example of a class syllabus’ CLO for Week 3 for a bachelor-level accounting class that uses McGraw Hill Connect Labs.

BU Resource Center image illustrating calculation of liquidity and solvency ratios for financial risk assessment, aligned with Guide to Substantive Feedback.
An informative image illustrating effective strategies for providing meaningful and constructive feedback in academic and professional settings.

Additional Notes and Considerations

Ambrose, S.A., Bridges, M.W., DiPietro, M., Lovett, M.C., & Norman, M.K. (2010). How learning works: Seven research-based principles for smart teaching. Jossey-Bass. 

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Copyright 2025 | Bryan University | 350 West Washington Street, Tempe, AZ 85281