TY - JOUR
T1 - Attitudes towards peer assessment
T2 - A comparison of the perspectives of preservice and inservice teachers
AU - Wen, Meichun Lydia
AU - Tsai, Chin Chung
AU - Chang, Chun Yen
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding of this research work is supported by the National Science Council (grant numbers NSC 92-2524-S-009-003 and NSC 93-2524-S-009-003), Taiwan, and the Ministry of Education, Taiwan (grant number E020-90B858). An earlier version of this paper was presented at the International Conference on Computers in Education 2003 (ICCE 2003), Hong Kong.
PY - 2006/2
Y1 - 2006/2
N2 - In recent years, peer assessment has been increasingly used as an alternative method of assessment in classrooms. The study described in this paper employed a 13-item Likert-scale instrument to evaluate participants attitudes towards both general (seven items) and online peer assessment (six items). A sample of 280 pre-service teachers and 108 in-service teachers from northern Taiwan participated in the study. A difference in attitude was found between pre-service and in-service teachers, because the latter viewed peer assessment as a learning aid. Our results also showed that male pre-service teachers had more positive attitudes towards peer assessment in general; male in-service teachers also liked the online approach more than did their female counterparts. Item-by-item analyses have been conducted in order to explore both the differences in attitude between pre-service and in-service teachers and to identify any gender effects.
AB - In recent years, peer assessment has been increasingly used as an alternative method of assessment in classrooms. The study described in this paper employed a 13-item Likert-scale instrument to evaluate participants attitudes towards both general (seven items) and online peer assessment (six items). A sample of 280 pre-service teachers and 108 in-service teachers from northern Taiwan participated in the study. A difference in attitude was found between pre-service and in-service teachers, because the latter viewed peer assessment as a learning aid. Our results also showed that male pre-service teachers had more positive attitudes towards peer assessment in general; male in-service teachers also liked the online approach more than did their female counterparts. Item-by-item analyses have been conducted in order to explore both the differences in attitude between pre-service and in-service teachers and to identify any gender effects.
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U2 - 10.1080/14703290500467640
DO - 10.1080/14703290500467640
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:32944457340
SN - 1355-8005
VL - 43
SP - 83
EP - 92
JO - Innovations in Education and Teaching International
JF - Innovations in Education and Teaching International
IS - 1
ER -