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Students’ self-grading, professor’s grading and negotiated final grading at three university programmes: analysis of reliability and grade difference ranges and tendencies
45
Citations
19
References
2011
Year
Negotiated Final GradingEducational PsychologyTeacher-student RelationEducationStudent OutcomePsychologyElementary EducationTeacher EducationApplied MeasurementTeacher DevelopmentUniversity ProgrammesNfg Versus SsgReliabilityEducational TestingEducational StatisticsEducational MeasurementGradingNegotiated Final GradeHigher EducationTeacher EnhancementPerformance StudiesStudent AssessmentReliability CorrelationsTeacher EvaluationTeacher AttitudesHigher Education AssessmentEducational AssessmentEducational EvaluationGrade Difference Ranges
Abstract This study was undertaken at three teacher education programmes and was designed to determine the following within each programme: (1) the reliability correlations among students' self‐grade (SSG), the grade granted by the professor (PG) and the negotiated final grade (NFG); (2) the range and frequency of grade differences between SSG and PG; and (3) the tendency of the negotiation on NFG as compared to SSG (i.e. NFG > SSG or NFG < SSG), when SSG was not equal to PG. The samples were made up of three professors and their corresponding student groups (students, n = 100, 34 and 53, respectively), each in a different teacher education programme. The results show that there was a high reliability correlation among SSG, PG and NFG in all three programmes. Furthermore, in these programmes, the grade differences were never higher than 1.5 on a scale of 0 to 10 points; in fact, agreement between DDG and PG was reached 96%, 35.29% and 43.39% of the time), and, when disagreement emerged, it was mainly within a minimum range of 0.1 to 0.5 points. As for the tendency of NFG versus SSG in each programme, slightly higher percentages were obtained for NFG > SSG in Programmes B and C, whereas the opposite (NFG < SSG) was true in Programme A; overall, however, it could be said that both tendencies balanced each other out, being the total percentages in each programme 0%, 41% and 30% for NFG > SSG; and 4%, 23% and 26%, for NFG < SSG, respectively. Keywords: self‐assessmentself‐evaluationself‐gradingshared assessmenthigher educationteacher education
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