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Published byNicholas Sutton Modified over 9 years ago
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T-Flip September 3rd 2015
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The use of peer assessment encourages students to believe they are part of a community of scholarship. In peer assessment we invite students to take part in a key aspect of higher education: making critical judgements on the work of others. We thus bring together the values and practices of teaching with those of research (Rowland 2000, Boud, 1990).
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Student – Student feedback advantages by judging the work of others, students gain insight into their own performance. giving a sense of ownership of the assessment process, improving motivation treating assessment as part of learning, so that mistakes are opportunities rather than failures practicing the transferable skills needed for life-long learning, especially evaluation skills
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Possible problems: difficulties with the validity and reliability of assessment done by students. How accurate are peer gradings? which model is “best practice”?
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Why? Traditionally: Validation The peer review process subjects scientific research papers to independent scrutiny by other qualified scientific experts (peers) before they are made public. http://www.senseaboutscience.org/pages/peer-review.html#sthash.w9XxklER.dpuf http://www.senseaboutscience.org/pages/peer-review.html#sthash.w9XxklER.dpuf T-Flip: Students review each other based on the same key principles Open Review: reviewer and author known to each other Open, honest, no need to state a point Politeness or friendship will tone down criticism
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Examples
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Possible problem?
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How to review?
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What will we do? Present tasks Create a system for review Monitopr and tutor in the process Evaluate both the review and what the review is used for
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How to make it work Realistic goals, well explained/clear tasks Repetition/practice (process) Enough time Acknowledge the difference between revision and editing Encorage honest responses and constructive advice A clear format which is easily recognizable Coach and observe Make it count (show that it is valuable) http://writing.wisc.edu/wac/node/78
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Sources Stephen Bostock (2000), Student Peer Assessement, http://www.reading.ac.uk/web/FILES/engageinassessment/Student_peer_assessment_- _Stephen_Bostock.pdf http://www.reading.ac.uk/web/FILES/engageinassessment/Student_peer_assessment_- _Stephen_Bostock.pdf Sense about Science, http://www.senseaboutscience.org/pages/peer- review.html#sthash.w9XxklER.dpufhttp://www.senseaboutscience.org/pages/peer- review.html#sthash.w9XxklER.dpuf Kirsten Jamsen (2015), Making Peer Review Work, http://writing.wisc.edu/wac/node/78 http://writing.wisc.edu/wac/node/78 Boud, D, 1990 Assessment and the promotion of academic values, Studies in Higher Education, 15(1), 101-111 Rowland, S. 2000 The Enquiring University Teacher, Buckingham: SRHE and Open University Press
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