Do visualizations ease dissertation assessment?

Judy Van Biljon, Karen Renaud

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

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Abstract

South Africa is working hard to improve the education levels of all their citizens, and, as a consequence, many South African Universities have seen an impressive increase in the number of postgraduate students. On the other hand, South African Universities have not been able to emp loy exp erienced supervisors at the same rate. Given the increasing workload, examin ers struggle to maintain their own high standards of consistency , accuracy and fairness. Assessing dissertations requires a serial traversal from beginning to end, sometimes repeatedly, since words are an imprecise communication tool and writing ability variable. Is there any way of making the process more efficient while retaining rigour? We cast the net wide to find a way, and, in doing so we noted the emerging use of visualization as a communication facilitator in other areas of academia and decided investigate it as a mechanism for easing the assessment process. As a first step, we need to determine the current extent of usage. Such usage is not incentivized nor is it explicitly rewarded. If we detect an impact on final grades, this will justify further investigation. We carr ied out a study that revealed weak correlations with the final grade, dep endin g where the visualizations appeared and also consulted supervisors for their views. The contribution of this paper is to suggest a discourse on the deliberate deployment of visualization to ease postgraduate assessment.
Original languageEnglish
Publication statusPublished - 15 Jul 2015
Event44th SACLA Conference - Johannesburg, United Kingdom
Duration: 2 Jul 20153 Jul 2015
https://sites.google.com/site/sacla2015/

Conference

Conference44th SACLA Conference
Abbreviated titleSACLA 2015
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom
CityJohannesburg
Period2/07/153/07/15
Internet address

Keywords

  • visualizations
  • postgraduate assessment
  • supervisor feedback
  • assessment efficiency

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