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this post was submitted on 23 Apr 2024
215 points (98.6% liked)
Mildly Interesting
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I think just randomized order would be enough. It is plausible for teachers to keep track of students' individual progress.
I think blind marking is important. I have literally heard people objecting to proposed grades with phrases like "but he's a bad student" or "but she's really bright."
Unless the assignment is a multiple choice quiz, you can’t really blind it because the thing being evaluated is output from that person.
A million tiny clues will indicate to your subconscious which student’s work you’re grading.
I can't imagine how, unless you only had 20 of them or something?
Back when I was a TA, I had an average of 120 students per semester and we didn't necessarily grade our own students' work (it was usually divided by topic).
So if I'm grading 120 assignments - or worse, 480 pieces of exam assessment- and only 25% of them are from students I regularly interact with, I don't think my subconscious has any idea 99% of the time.
Even with smaller classes... you're just seeing too many people with similar thoughts and styles over the course of a year for any of it to imprint on your mind that deeply. Occasionally it's going to be obvious, but I still think removing a level of bias through anonymizing is best practice.
So, just the people who get marked last are randomly affected?
Not sure what you mean. Do you think that blind marking would somehow eradicate the bias onto these who get graded later?
No. Exactly the opposite. The problem continues to exist, but now it's hidden.
It's improved at least, randomized would be different each time and would influence everyone's grades evenly in a spread out period (in theory.)
So, you're arguing that randomness is an accurate and acceptable way to score a test?
I wonder how the students feel about that..
This isn't a flippant remark either. There's a much larger issue hiding in plain sight. If there's no relationship between the test and the marking then there's no point in using this process. In other words, this research appears to be saying something more profound than just commenting on the order of the tests.
It's less about the individual test, and more so spreading the human error across many tests rather than "the last few tests"
Well, yeah. I'd argue that's better than people with certain names being consistently affected.
They both seem equally bad to me.
You don't have to have either problem though; both can be avoided easily.