Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › Research › peer-review
Peer assessment in massive open online courses : Monitoring the knowledge assessment effectiveness. / Popova, Tatiana; Kolesova, Daria.
Proceedings - CSIS 2019: 11th International Scientific and Theoretical Conference "Communicative strategies of Information Society". ed. / Alfred Nordmann; Laurent Moccozet; Violetta Volkova; Olga Shipunova. Association for Computing Machinery, 2019. (ACM International Conference Proceeding Series).Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding › Conference contribution › Research › peer-review
}
TY - GEN
T1 - Peer assessment in massive open online courses
T2 - 11th International Scientific and Theoretical Conference "Communicative strategies of Information Society", CSIS 2019
AU - Popova, Tatiana
AU - Kolesova, Daria
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2019 Association for Computing Machinery.
PY - 2019/10/25
Y1 - 2019/10/25
N2 - Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) is an advanced form of education in the modern world. With all the advantages this format has, it is difficult to leave unchanged all the procedures included into the traditional teach-learn-assess training cycle; this difficulty can be explained by the specific form of teaching. Peer assessment is usually used to overcome these objective obstacles, although unmoderated peer assessment is questioned by experts and is not trusted much by students (and thus, accordingly, entails a decreasing motivation as students withhold from assessing performance of their peers and withdraw from learning platforms). The works dedicated to this issue mainly deal with multiple ways to resolve it within the scope of the programmers' approach or the approach of the training platform moderators. Our study deals with the question of whether correctly formulated assignments and a methodologically justified sequence of assignments help to overcome these difficulties. The study was performed with the use of questionnaires for students of various academic years (2017-2019) taking part in one MOOC, and with quantitative and qualitative analysis of the performed assignments for peer assessment for 2017 (within the scope of that session, 947 answers were given to the self-assessment assignments, and 727 answers were given to the assignments for peer assessment). The result of the study was a supported recommendation to authors of the MOOC profile in humanities, wherein the essay was supposed to be the student’s expected answer: 1) there should be a clear correlation between the conditions of the assignment setting and the criteria used for assessment of the assignment for peer assessment; 2) self-assessment assignments built on the basis of the same principle as the peer assessment assignments should be included in the course.
AB - Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) is an advanced form of education in the modern world. With all the advantages this format has, it is difficult to leave unchanged all the procedures included into the traditional teach-learn-assess training cycle; this difficulty can be explained by the specific form of teaching. Peer assessment is usually used to overcome these objective obstacles, although unmoderated peer assessment is questioned by experts and is not trusted much by students (and thus, accordingly, entails a decreasing motivation as students withhold from assessing performance of their peers and withdraw from learning platforms). The works dedicated to this issue mainly deal with multiple ways to resolve it within the scope of the programmers' approach or the approach of the training platform moderators. Our study deals with the question of whether correctly formulated assignments and a methodologically justified sequence of assignments help to overcome these difficulties. The study was performed with the use of questionnaires for students of various academic years (2017-2019) taking part in one MOOC, and with quantitative and qualitative analysis of the performed assignments for peer assessment for 2017 (within the scope of that session, 947 answers were given to the self-assessment assignments, and 727 answers were given to the assignments for peer assessment). The result of the study was a supported recommendation to authors of the MOOC profile in humanities, wherein the essay was supposed to be the student’s expected answer: 1) there should be a clear correlation between the conditions of the assignment setting and the criteria used for assessment of the assignment for peer assessment; 2) self-assessment assignments built on the basis of the same principle as the peer assessment assignments should be included in the course.
KW - Accuracy
KW - Assessment ability
KW - Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs)
KW - Peer assessment
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85123040230&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1145/3373722.3373794
DO - 10.1145/3373722.3373794
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:85123040230
T3 - ACM International Conference Proceeding Series
BT - Proceedings - CSIS 2019
A2 - Nordmann, Alfred
A2 - Moccozet, Laurent
A2 - Volkova, Violetta
A2 - Shipunova, Olga
PB - Association for Computing Machinery
Y2 - 25 October 2019 through 26 October 2019
ER -
ID: 93712740