Quality Is Free: Philip Crosby, Simplified Quality Definitions, and the Future of Educational Assessment

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Title: Quality Is Free: Philip Crosby, Simplified Quality Definitions, and the Future of Educational Assessment
Language: English
Authors: Matthew Metzgar
Source: Curriculum and Teaching. 2026 41(1):51-62.
Availability: James Nicholas Publishers. PO Box 5179, South Melbourne, VIC 3205 Australia. Tel: +61-39-696-5545; Fax: +61-39-699-2040; e-mail: custservice@jnponline.com; Web site: https://www.jamesnicholaspublishers.com.au/
Peer Reviewed: Y
Page Count: 12
Publication Date: 2026
Document Type: Journal Articles
Reports - Descriptive
Descriptors: Educational Assessment, Formative Evaluation, Total Quality Management, Scoring Rubrics, Validity, Reliability, Educational Quality, Alignment (Education), Performance Based Assessment
DOI: 10.7459/ct/410104
ISSN: 0726-416X
2201-0602
Abstract: This paper applies Philip Crosby's core ideas from "Quality Is Free" to contemporary educational assessment, arguing that simplifying and clarifying definitions of quality can make assessment more reliable, equitable, and effective. Crosby's four principles--quality as conformance to requirements, prevention rather than inspection, zero defects in system design, and measuring the price of nonconformance--offer a useful framework for addressing long-standing assessment challenges such as vague criteria, inconsistent grading, weak alignment, and inequitable outcomes. Drawing on literature in constructive alignment, formative assessment, rubrics, validity, reliability, and sustainable assessment, the paper shows that unclear conceptions of "good work" create substantial hidden costs for students and institutions, including remediation, misclassification, disengagement, and excessive workload. In contrast, clear learning outcomes and simplified success criteria support consistent scoring, meaningful feedback, and student understanding of quality. A prevention-oriented assessment system--featuring formative assessment, feedback cycles, and opportunities for revision--reduces defects in final performances and strengthens mastery-based learning. The paper concludes that while care must be taken to avoid over-simplification, a Crosby-informed approach redirects assessment toward clarity, alignment, and fairness, making high-quality assessment an attainable and sustainable goal.
Abstractor: As Provided
Entry Date: 2026
Accession Number: EJ1508712
Database: ERIC
Description
Abstract:This paper applies Philip Crosby's core ideas from "Quality Is Free" to contemporary educational assessment, arguing that simplifying and clarifying definitions of quality can make assessment more reliable, equitable, and effective. Crosby's four principles--quality as conformance to requirements, prevention rather than inspection, zero defects in system design, and measuring the price of nonconformance--offer a useful framework for addressing long-standing assessment challenges such as vague criteria, inconsistent grading, weak alignment, and inequitable outcomes. Drawing on literature in constructive alignment, formative assessment, rubrics, validity, reliability, and sustainable assessment, the paper shows that unclear conceptions of "good work" create substantial hidden costs for students and institutions, including remediation, misclassification, disengagement, and excessive workload. In contrast, clear learning outcomes and simplified success criteria support consistent scoring, meaningful feedback, and student understanding of quality. A prevention-oriented assessment system--featuring formative assessment, feedback cycles, and opportunities for revision--reduces defects in final performances and strengthens mastery-based learning. The paper concludes that while care must be taken to avoid over-simplification, a Crosby-informed approach redirects assessment toward clarity, alignment, and fairness, making high-quality assessment an attainable and sustainable goal.
ISSN:0726-416X
2201-0602
DOI:10.7459/ct/410104