2020
DOI: 10.1007/s40841-020-00163-3
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Assessment by Comparative Judgement: An Application to Secondary Statistics and English in New Zealand

Abstract: There is growing interest in using comparative judgement to assess student work as an alternative to traditional marking. Comparative judgement requires no rubrics and is instead grounded in experts making pairwise judgements about the relative 'quality' of students' work according to a high level criterion. The resulting decision data are fitted to a statistical model to produce a score for each student. Cited benefits of comparative judgement over traditional methods include increased reliability, validity a… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(7 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
(48 reference statements)
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“…These time data are an overestimate because the timer of the online platform does not stop when judges move away from the computer leaving the screen open. The time required for the comparisons in our experimentation does not differ much from the estimate reported in Marshall et al (2020) and, in our opinion, it is reasonable when taking into consideration the length of texts, their nature, and difficulties linked to deciphering handwriting. However, based on our experience, the time is less than that usually required to grade a single text by a traditional marking method.…”
Section: Opinions On Cj As An Assessment Techniquementioning
confidence: 46%
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“…These time data are an overestimate because the timer of the online platform does not stop when judges move away from the computer leaving the screen open. The time required for the comparisons in our experimentation does not differ much from the estimate reported in Marshall et al (2020) and, in our opinion, it is reasonable when taking into consideration the length of texts, their nature, and difficulties linked to deciphering handwriting. However, based on our experience, the time is less than that usually required to grade a single text by a traditional marking method.…”
Section: Opinions On Cj As An Assessment Techniquementioning
confidence: 46%
“…It is proven to be even more reliable than traditional marking in open-ended assessment not only in mathematics (Jones & Alcock, 2014;Steedle & Ferrara, 2016). This assessment technique has been used with several mathematical topics: problem-solving (Jones & Inglis, 2015), conceptual understanding (Bisson et al, 2016;Jones & Alcock, 2014;Jones & Karadeniz, 2016), mathematical proof (Davies et al, 2020), and also statistical knowledge (Bisson et al, 2016;Marshall et al, 2020). As far as we know, CJ has never been used to assess tests requiring covariational reasoning.…”
Section: Comparative Judgement: An Assessment Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Recently, Sangwin and Kinnear (2021) also used CJ to judge several different aspects of mathematical proof, evaluating whether they were reliable constructs by post-hoc analysis. On the whole, CJ is considered effective in evaluation of complex, creative and composite work involving skills such as making connections between learned ideas, applying understanding to novel contexts, constructing arguments and demonstrating chains of reasoning (Marshall et al, 2020) which we suggest includes knowledge brokering work such as the research summaries evaluated in this study.…”
Section: Comparative Judgement (Cj)mentioning
confidence: 99%