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Unreliability in marking is well documented yet we lack studies that have investigated assessors’ detailed use of assessment criteria. This project used a form of Kelly’s Repertory Grid method to examine the characteristics that 24 experienced, UK assessors notice in distinguishing between students’ performance in four contrasting subject disciplines: that is their implicit assessment criteria. Variation in the choice, ranking and scoring of criteria was evident. Inspection of the individual construct scores in a sub-sample of academic historians revealed five factors in the use of criteria that contribute to marking inconsistency. The results imply that whilst more effective and social marking processes that encourage sharing of standards in institutions and disciplinary communities may help align standards, assessment decisions at this level are so complex, intuitive and tacit that variability is inevitable. It concludes that universities should be more honest with themselves and with students and actively help students to understand that application of assessment criteria is a complex judgement and there is rarely an incontestable interpretation of their meaning.
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Sue Bloxham
University of Cumbria
Birgit den-Outer
Oxford Brookes University
Jane Hudson
Oxford Brookes University
Assessment & Evaluation in Higher Education
Oxford Brookes University
University of Cumbria
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Bloxham et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a0f2bc64994b59e774268e8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/02602938.2015.1024607