Assessing 4th Year Theses

John Shepherd

Summary

This proposal aims to make thesis marking simpler, more consistent and more reliable. The description refers mainly to Thesis B, but the intention would be to extend it to Thesis A as well. Comments are welcome on both the overall aproach and specific details.

Background

The current system of awarding marks for Thesis B uses two possibilities:

The tendency in recent years has been to enter a single final mark. In neither case is there a requirement to justify the mark(s).

The single mark approach has several problems: The multiple criteria approach also has its drawbacks:

This proposal suggests a system that

  1. uses well-defined and more relevant criteria
  2. employs a reasonable level of granularity
  3. decouples the markers from the final numeric mark
The system is somewhat along the lines of how papers are reviewed for good quality conferences. Conference reviews employ a relatively small set of criteria (originality, relevance to conference, etc.) and employ a coarse grading (definitely accept, marginal, reject, etc.). Also, reviewers are obliged to justify their "grading" via comments to both the authors and the program committee. Obviously, the criteria for undergraduate theses are quite different to the criteria for refereed conference papers, but I think we can learn something from this process, and the approach has the advantage that it should be familiar to academic staff.

The aim is to try to improve the simplicity, consistency and reliability of assessment. We define a small set of assessment criteria. Markers award a grade, not a mark, for each criterion, and supply a comment to justify the grade. The final mark is computed by the system by mapping each grade to a mark and computing a weighted-sum of the individual criterion marks.

What's required to mark a Thesis B Report:

The discussion below talks only about the Thesis B report, since this is the most highly "weighted" assessment item in the Thesis universe. (Note: there's another whole discussion waiting to be had when talking aboutthe relative weighting of Thesis Part A and Thesis Part B).

Criteria for Thesis B Report

4. Evaluation

The above criteria need to be better defined, and the meaning of each grade below probably needs to be specified with respect to each criteria.

Grades

1. Presentation
  • quality of written english
  • structure of thesis (chapters/sections)
  • logical flow of arguments
  • effective citation and referencing
2. Background
  • comprehensive description of problem space
  • reference to and analysis of other work
3. Own Work
  • originality of approach to the problem
  • quality of the final results or system
  • for a research thesis: original contribution
  • for a development thesis: quality of software
  • used appropriate analystical instruments
  • carried out analysis effectively
  • analysed results appropriately
  • realistic appraisal of achievements/limitations

Grade-to-Mark Mapping

A+
  • absolutely top-quality work, best I've seen
  • publishable in good conference with little change
A
  • excellent work, does everything required
  • results are good, could be published with some re-working
B
  • good quality work, but with some deficiencies
  • would need substantially more work to be publishable
C
  • adequate
  • the topic could have been treated much better
D
  • just satisfactory, minimal standard for a CSE thesis
E
  • not up to standard required of a CSE thesis
F
  • very much below the standard required of a CSE thesis

Some alternative suggestions for mapping grades to marks:

Criteria Weightings (Thesis B)

The weights of the individual criteria towards the final mark could be determined in several ways:

A+100% of the mark for that component
A90% of the mark for that component
B80% of the mark for that compnent
C70% of the mark for that component
D58% of the mark for that component
E40% of the mark for that component
F20% of the mark for that component
R 1 = 20%, 2 = 20%, 3 = 30%, 4 = 30%
R+D 1 = 20%, 2 = 20%, 3 = 40%, 4 = 20%
D 1 = 20%, 2 = 10%, 3 = 50%, 4 = 20%

Rationale for the above: in a development thesis, we're more interested in the final product (system) than in the literature review ... although perhaps this suggests that maybe the criteria (and the weights) should be different for development theses rather than simply the weights.

  • determined up-front as a "contract" between student and supervisor

  • determined after thesis submission by the student

    Note: the percentages above are illustrative only. We can debate

    John Shepherd, March 2008


    Some Extra Preliminary Thoughts...

    Criteria for Thesis A Report

    1. Presentation
    • quality of written english
    • structure of thesis (chapters/sections)
    • logical flow of arguments
    • effective citation and referencing
    2. Background
    • comprehensive description of problem space
    • reference to and analysis of other work
    3. Proposal
    • proposed approach to the problem
    • thoroughness/feasibility of the plan
    4. Preliminary Work
    • results so far (by Week 11)