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E-raamat: Machine Scoring of Student Essays: Truth and Consequences

  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Mar-2006
  • Kirjastus: Utah State University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780874215366
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  • Formaat: PDF+DRM
  • Ilmumisaeg: 15-Mar-2006
  • Kirjastus: Utah State University Press
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780874215366

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The current trend toward machine-scoring of student work, Ericsson and Haswell argue, has created an emerging issue with implications for higher education across the disciplines, but with particular importance for those in English departments and in administration. The academic community has been silent on the issue—some would say excluded from it—while the commercial entities who develop essay-scoring software have been very active.



Machine Scoring of Student Essays
is the first volume to seriously consider the educational mechanisms and consequences of this trend, and it offers important discussions from some of the leading scholars in writing assessment.



Reading and evaluating student writing is a time-consuming process, yet it is a vital part of both student placement and coursework at post-secondary institutions. In recent years, commercial computer-evaluation programs have been developed to score student essays in both of these contexts. Two-year colleges have been especially drawn to these programs, but four-year institutions are moving to them as well, because of the cost-savings they promise. Unfortunately, to a large extent, the programs have been written, and institutions are installing them, without attention to their instructional validity or adequacy.



Since the education software companies are moving so rapidly into what they perceive as a promising new market, a wider discussion of machine-scoring is vital if scholars hope to influence development and/or implementation of the programs being created. What is needed, then, is a critical resource to help teachers and administrators evaluate programs they might be considering, and to more fully envision the instructional consequences of adopting them. And this is the resource that Ericsson and Haswell are providing here.

Introduction 1(7)
Patricia Freitag Ericsson
Richard H. Haswell
Interested Complicities: The Dialectic of Computer-Assisted Writing Assessment
8(20)
Ken S. McAllister
Edward M. White
The Meaning of Meaning: Is a Paragraph More than an Equation?
28(10)
Patricia Freitag Ericsson
Can't Touch This: Reflections on the Servitude of Computers as Readers
38(19)
Chris M. Anson
Automatons and Automated Scoring: Drudges, Black Boxes, and Dei Ex Machina
57(22)
Richard H. Haswell
Taking a Spin on the Intelligent Essay Assessor
79(14)
Tim McGee
Accuplacer's Essay-Scoring Technology: When Reliability Does Not Equal Validity
93(21)
Edmund Jones
WritePlacer Plus in Place: An Exploratory Case Study
114(16)
Anne Herrington
Charles Moran
E-Write as a Means for Placement into Three Composition Courses: A Pilot Study
130(8)
Richard N. Matzen Jr.
Colleen Sorensen
Computerized Writing Assessment: Community College Faculty Find Reasons to Say ``Not Yet''
138(9)
William W. Ziegler
Piloting the Compass E-Write Software at Jackson State Community College
147(7)
Ten T. Maddox
The Role of the Writing Coordinator in a Culture of Placement by Accuplacer
154(12)
Gail S. Corso
Always Already: Automated Essay Scoring and Grammar-Checkers in College Writing Courses
166(11)
Carl Whithaus
Automated Essay Grading in the Sociology Classroom: Finding Common Ground
177(22)
Edward Brent
Martha Townsend
Automated Writing Instruction: Computer-Assisted or Computer-Driven Pedagogies?
199(12)
Beth Ann Rothermel
Why Less Is Not More: What We Lose by Letting a Computer Score Writing Samples
211(10)
William Condon
More Work for Teacher? Possible Futures of Teaching Writing in the Age of Computerized Writing Assessment
221(13)
Bob Broad
A Bibliography of Machine Scoring of Student Writing, 1962-2005
234(10)
Richard H. Haswell
Glossary 244(2)
Notes 246(5)
References 251(11)
Index 262