DocumentCode :
3143084
Title :
Towards a Canonical View of Peer Assessment
Author :
Millard, David E. ; Fill, Karen ; Gilbert, Lester ; Howard, Yvonne ; Sinclair, Patrick ; Senbanjo, Damilola O. ; Wills, Gary B.
Author_Institution :
Univ. of Southampton, Southampton
fYear :
2007
fDate :
18-20 July 2007
Firstpage :
793
Lastpage :
797
Abstract :
Peer assessment (or peer review) is a popular form of reciprocal assessment where students produce feedback, or grades, for each others work. Peer assessment activities can be extremely varied with participants taking different roles at different stages of the process and materials passing between roles in sophisticated patterns. This variety makes designing peer assessment systems very challenging. In this paper we present a number of peer assessment case studies and show how a simple review cycle can be used as a building block to achieve the more complex cases. We then propose a canonical use case for peer assessment, in which a review plan is used to describe how review cycles can be combined to achieve the required complexity.
Keywords :
educational technology; materials passing; peer assessment systems; system complexity; Art; Collaborative work; Computer science; Electronic learning; Feedback; History; Online Communities/Technical Collaboration; Peer to peer computing; Production; Surface treatment;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Advanced Learning Technologies, 2007. ICALT 2007. Seventh IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Niigata
Print_ISBN :
0-7695-2916-X
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICALT.2007.260
Filename :
4281160
Link To Document :
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