Marking identifiable scripts: following up student concerns

Date

2010

Authors

Owen, Cathy
Stefaniak, John
Corrigan, Gerard

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

University of Bath

Abstract

Introduction: Medical student concern that the submission of named examination scripts to examiners could cause bias initiated a study on the effect of identified and de-identified scripts on assessment outcome. Methods: Data were collected from a convenience examination sample of Year 1 (n = 88 students; n = 29 questions) and Year 2 scripts (n = 75 students; n = 27 questions). Scripts were randomised for presentation to examiners with or without identification for all of a given student's work. Assessment outcomes, by year and marking condition, were a non-normal distribution. Results: Non-parametric analysis determined that there were no systematic differences in assessment outcome under the two marking conditions (MW < 0.05). Conclusion: We continue for a range of pedagogical reasons to present identified papers to examiners. Importantly, this study also demonstrates a research-led approach to resolving student queries.

Description

Keywords

Keywords: Anonymity; Assessment; Bias; Examination scripts; Students

Citation

Source

Assessment and Evaluation in Higher Education

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31