A shared google drive folder is a reasonable alternative to git. Google Docs let you see who edited what via the version history.
Good luck. I'd be interested in knowing how it goes. I'm researching how to support faculty in these scenarios. -Erika Erika S. Mesh [email protected] Visiting Lecturer, School of Interactive Games & Media Rochester Institute of Technology * Please excuse brevity and any typos. Sent from my mobile device. On Jan 18, 2019 3:19 PM, Jarek Bryk via discuss <[email protected]> wrote: Hi, Thanks a lot for the suggestions! While git is out of the question (too little time to introduce it and practice it), I will definitely consider the elements of peer evaluation or group work that you mention (group code of conduct, public self-assessment and explicit list of contributions). CATME also looks very interesting. Food for thought! Thanks again, Jarek On 18 January 2019 at 16:53:03, Madeleine Bonsma ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) wrote: Hi Jarek, I and some colleagues ran a course that sounds quite similar, at least in structure and goals - it was an introduction to R and statistical data analysis for ecology<https://uoftcoders.github.io/rcourse/>. We had groups of 4 students working on a data analysis project at the end, and to assess their group contributions we had them each submit a one-paragraph self-assessment along with the project, outlining what their contribution to the project was. Very similar to what Sarah said, and I agree with her on the benefits of doing that in a way that all group members can see. We had tried in a previous version of the course to use GitHub contributions to track group participation, but since Git was so new to the students, there was often one student in the group who did most of the GitHub management, and we felt it would be unfair to penalize them for distributing the labour in that way. Another thing that I cannot recommend enough: if possible, get each group to make themselves a code of conduct. From what I saw, this really helped with the tone of the group work and the eagerness of everyone to contribute to their groups. Best, Madeleine On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 5:33 PM Sarah Supp <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Both of these suggestions are great - peer evaluation and using GitHub or another tool to track evaluations. Another thing I sometimes do in a group project situation is have students add a "Personnel" or "Contributions" section, where they need to list each of their names and write about what aspects of the project they took the lead on and contributed to. I think for many students, when they have to "claim" parts of the project officially in writing, it feels a little more real and like there's some weight to actually making a significant contribution vs free riding. They also might get some real pushback from their peers if at the end of the project someone claimed to take lead on something that they actually contributed little to, and become apparent to the instructor. Good luck! On Fri, Jan 18, 2019 at 9:56 AM Erika Mesh <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote: Hi Jarek, I teach a lot of group projects here at RIT. Peer evaluations is a huge element of being able to assess contributions. I also have groups keep everything in GitHub so that I can objectively see evidence of what they report in the peer evals. I then generally say that I “reserve the right” to adjust a student’s grade up or down based on the evals + my observations of their engagement in the project. Catme.org is another great resource about peer evals and managing group work. --Erika Erika S. Mesh, GOL-2573 Visiting Lecturer, School of Interactive Games & Media Rochester Institute of Technology [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> From: Jarek Bryk via discuss <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Sent: Friday, January 18, 2019 9:41 AM To: discuss <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> Subject: Re: [discuss] Ideas needed for asessment of group-based data analysis project Hi, The projects would be group responsibility and they will be of sufficient complexity that working on them only during the class will not be sufficient (at least not for all groups). I can also imagine a scenario where a group decides to split tasks to different individuals (and of course we cannot control what students would work on outside the class). So I think the answer to your question is mostly - but not entirely - in-class group work :-) This group work throughput the project is what assessment of is giving me headaches. Best Jarek On 18 January 2019 at 13:56:21, Leinweber, Katrin ([email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>) wrote: Hi Jarek, That sounds interesting! One question to clarify: Will the students work on the group projects only together during the class (thus creating a pair-/mob-programming-like situation) or also individually outside of class (and for example bringing completed subtask to the next time their group meets)? As I understand this now, I think the two different situations may have very different biases attached to the perception of individual contributions. Kind regards, Katrin University of Huddersfield inspiring tomorrow's professionals. [http://marketing.hud.ac.uk/_HOSTED/EmailSig2014/EmailSigFooter.jpg] This transmission is confidential and may be legally privileged. If you receive it in error, please notify us immediately by e-mail and remove it from your system. If the content of this e-mail does not relate to the business of the University of Huddersfield, then we do not endorse it and will accept no liability. The Carpentries<https://carpentries.topicbox.com/latest> / discuss / see discussions<https://carpentries.topicbox.com/groups/discuss> + participants<https://carpentries.topicbox.com/groups/discuss/members> + delivery options<https://carpentries.topicbox.com/groups/discuss/subscription> Permalink<https://carpentries.topicbox.com/groups/discuss/Tc92aacda71839af9-M145dd0012db2eecacde06352> ------------------------------------------ The Carpentries: discuss Permalink: https://carpentries.topicbox.com/groups/discuss/Tc92aacda71839af9-Madadf19a0822e6fbcb036dff Delivery options: https://carpentries.topicbox.com/groups/discuss/subscription
