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by lurker-
3193 days ago
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I used it for one of my courses a little over a year ago; I don't recall seeing any flag, but maybe that's a newish feature. My primary problem was that the professor often created a question or two that 9/10 groups hadn't addressed, and failed to add questions addressing the value of their work. Meaning a group may have created a product worthy of a 95+/100 score, but failed to address some poorly made question by the professor. Although you could argue that flaw lies upon the professor rather than your product :) Another problem was that it was very easy to figure out the owner of the assignment, which basically meant that many of the students would give top score to their friends regardless of the quality of their work. Finally, I hated the psychology that played into effect when grading the peers. Especially because I couldn't help but think that the professor would be able to associate the comments/scores to me (resulting in me giving overly positive scores to terrible assignments).. That being said, I think what you're building is really great, and if I were a professor then I'd likely want to use it myself. |
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One of our biggest challenges is making a product that is flexible for teachers but which is hard to misuse. Bad assessment rubrics give bad student experiences, and unfortunately we can't make them for the teachers. We are in the process of writing a small booklet for teachers on how to make rubrics better.
The challenge with anonymity is especially a problem in smaller classes. We make sure to strip metadata from the submissions, so if people don't put their names in the documents, the only way to determine the author is to know the content or the writing style. It sounds like the challenge in your course was that people were working on different projects and that you knew who was working on what?
The psychology part is the most tricky. We want to make a setup where the incentives are correct, but where people don't feel scared of giving feedback to each other. The way we primarily do this is through feedback-on-feedback where receivers of feedback are asked to review the quality of the feedback they received, and then we let the teachers moderate this and students flag problems. I don't think we are completely there yet, but I can definitely see that we are making progress on solving this :).