The accuracy and efficiency of a reference-based adaptive selection algorithm for comparative judgement University of Antwerp
San Verhavert, Renske Bouwer, Antony Furlong
Several studies have proven that comparative judgement (CJ) is a reliable and valid assessment method for a variety of competences, expert assessment and peer assessment, and CJ is emerging as a possible approach to help maintain standards over time. For consecutive pairs of student works (representations) assessors are asked to judge which representation is better. It has been shown that random construction of pairs leads to very inefficient assessments, requiring a lot of pairwise comparisons to reach reliable results. Some adaptive selection algorithms using information from previous ...