Influence of individual versus collaborative peer assessment on score accuracy and learning outcomes in higher education: an empirical study

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Título: Influence of individual versus collaborative peer assessment on score accuracy and learning outcomes in higher education: an empirical study
Autor/es: Rico-Juan, Juan Ramón | Cachero, Cristina | Macià, Hermenegilda
Grupo/s de investigación o GITE: Reconocimiento de Formas e Inteligencia Artificial | Advanced deveLopment and empIrical research on Software (ALISoft)
Centro, Departamento o Servicio: Universidad de Alicante. Departamento de Lenguajes y Sistemas Informáticos
Palabras clave: Experimental research | Student assessment | Self-assessment | Peer assessment | Collaborative evaluation
Fecha de publicación: 2022
Editor: Asociación de Enseñantes Universitarios de la Informática (AENUI)
Cita bibliográfica: Rico-Juan, Juan Ramón; Cachero, Cristina; Macià, Hermenegilda. “Influence of individual versus collaborative peer assessment on score accuracy and learning outcomes in higher education: an empirical study”. En: Catalán Cantero, Carlos; Paramá Gabia, José Ramón (eds.). Actas de las XXVIII Jornadas sobre la Enseñanza Universitaria de la Informática, A Coruña, 6-8 de julio de 2022. A Coruña: Asociación de Enseñantes Universitarios de la Informática, 2022, p. 399
Resumen: Maximising the accuracy and learning of self and peer assessment activities in higher education requires instructors to make several design decisions, including whether the assessment process should be individual or collaborative, and, if collaborative, determining the number of members of each peer assessment team. In order to support this decision, a quasi-experiment was carried out in which 82 first-year students used three peer assessment modalities. A total of 1574 assessments were obtained. The accuracy of both the students’ self-assessment and their peer assessment was measured. Results show that students’ self-assessment significantly improved when groups of three were used, provided that those with the 20% poorest performances were excluded from the analysis. This suggests that collaborative peer assessment improves learning. Peer assessment scores were more accurate than self-assessment, regardless of the modality, and the accuracy improved with the number of assessments received. Instructors need to consider the trade-off between students’ improved understanding, which favours peer assessment using groups of three, and a higher number of assessments, which, under time constraints, favours individual peer assessment.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10045/129045
ISSN: 2531-0607
Idioma: eng
Tipo: info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
Derechos: Licencia Creative Commons Reconocimiento-NoComercial-CompartirIgual 4.0
Revisión científica: si
Versión del editor: https://aenui.org/actas/indice_e.html#anio2022
Aparece en las colecciones:INV - ALISoft - Comunicaciones a Congresos, Conferencias, etc.
JENUI 2022
INV - GRFIA - Comunicaciones a Congresos, Conferencias, etc.
INV - ALISoft - Comunicaciones a Congresos, Conferencias, etc.

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