|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
This new volume is the first to focus entirely on automated essay
scoring and evaluation. It is intended to provide a comprehensive
overview of the evolution and state-of-the-art of automated essay
scoring and evaluation technology across several disciplines,
including education, testing and measurement, cognitive science,
computer science, and computational linguistics. The development of
this technology has led to many questions and concerns. Automated
Essay Scoring attempts to address some of these questions
including: *How can automated scoring and evaluation supplement
classroom instruction? *How does the technology actually work? *Can
it improve students' writing? *How reliable is the technology? *How
can these computing methods be used to develop evaluation tools?
*What are the state-of the-art essay evaluation technologies and
automated scoring systems? Divided into four parts, the first part
reviews the teaching of writing and how computers can contribute to
it. Part II analyzes actual automated essay scorers including
e-raterTM, Intellimetric, and the Intelligent Essay Assessor. The
third part analyzes related psychometric issues, and the final part
reviews innovations in the field. This book is ideal for
researchers and advanced students interested in automated essay
scoring from the fields of testing and measurement, education,
cognitive science, language, and computational linguistics.
This new volume is the first to focus entirely on automated essay
scoring and evaluation. It is intended to provide a comprehensive
overview of the evolution and state-of-the-art of automated essay
scoring and evaluation technology across several disciplines,
including education, testing and measurement, cognitive science,
computer science, and computational linguistics.
The development of this technology has led to many questions and
concerns. "Automated Essay Scoring" attempts to address some of
these questions including:
*How can automated scoring and evaluation supplement classroom
instruction?
*How does the technology actually work?
*Can it improve students' writing?
*How reliable is the technology?
*How can these computing methods be used to develop evaluation
tools?
*What are the state-of the-art essay evaluation technologies and
automated scoring systems?
Divided into four parts, the first part reviews the teaching of
writing and how computers can contribute to it. Part II analyzes
actual automated essay scorers including "e-raterTM,
Intellimetric," and the " Intelligent Essay Assessor." The third
part analyzes related psychometric issues, and the final part
reviews innovations in the field.
This book is ideal for researchers and advanced students
interested in automated essay scoring from the fields of testing
and measurement, education, cognitive science, language, and
computational linguistics.
This comprehensive, interdisciplinary handbook reviews the latest
methods and technologies used in automated essay evaluation (AEE)
methods and technologies. Highlights include the latest in the
evaluation of performance-based writing assessments and recent
advances in the teaching of writing, language testing, cognitive
psychology, and computational linguistics. This greatly expanded
follow-up to Automated Essay Scoring reflects the numerous advances
that have taken place in the field since 2003 including automated
essay scoring and diagnostic feedback. Each chapter features a
common structure including an introduction and a conclusion. Ideas
for diagnostic and evaluative feedback are sprinkled throughout the
book. Highlights of the book's coverage include: The latest
research on automated essay evaluation. Descriptions of the major
scoring engines including the E-rater (R), the Intelligent Essay
Assessor, the Intellimetric (TM) Engine, c-rater (TM), and
LightSIDE. Applications of the uses of the technology including a
large scale system used in West Virginia. A systematic framework
for evaluating research and technological results. Descriptions of
AEE methods that can be replicated for languages other than English
as seen in the example from China. Chapters from key researchers in
the field. The book opens with an introduction to AEEs and a review
of the "best practices" of teaching writing along with tips on the
use of automated analysis in the classroom. Next the book
highlights the capabilities and applications of several scoring
engines including the E-rater (R), the Intelligent Essay Assessor,
the Intellimetric (TM) engine, c-rater (TM), and LightSIDE. Here
readers will find an actual application of the use of an AEE in
West Virginia, psychometric issues related to AEEs such as
validity, reliability, and scaling, and the use of automated
scoring to detect reader drift, grammatical errors, discourse
coherence quality, and the impact of human rating on AEEs. A review
of the cognitive foundations underlying methods used in AEE is also
provided. The book concludes with a comparison of the various AEE
systems and speculation about the future of the field in light of
current educational policy. Ideal for educators, professionals,
curriculum specialists, and administrators responsible for
developing writing programs or distance learning curricula, those
who teach using AEE technologies, policy makers, and researchers in
education, writing, psychometrics, cognitive psychology, and
computational linguistics, this book also serves as a reference for
graduate courses on automated essay evaluation taught in education,
computer science, language, linguistics, and cognitive psychology.
This comprehensive, interdisciplinary handbook reviews the latest
methods and technologies used in automated essay evaluation (AEE)
methods and technologies. Highlights include the latest in the
evaluation of performance-based writing assessments and recent
advances in the teaching of writing, language testing, cognitive
psychology, and computational linguistics. This greatly expanded
follow-up to Automated Essay Scoring reflects the numerous advances
that have taken place in the field since 2003 including automated
essay scoring and diagnostic feedback. Each chapter features a
common structure including an introduction and a conclusion. Ideas
for diagnostic and evaluative feedback are sprinkled throughout the
book. Highlights of the book's coverage include: The latest
research on automated essay evaluation. Descriptions of the major
scoring engines including the E-rater (R), the Intelligent Essay
Assessor, the Intellimetric (TM) Engine, c-rater (TM), and
LightSIDE. Applications of the uses of the technology including a
large scale system used in West Virginia. A systematic framework
for evaluating research and technological results. Descriptions of
AEE methods that can be replicated for languages other than English
as seen in the example from China. Chapters from key researchers in
the field. The book opens with an introduction to AEEs and a review
of the "best practices" of teaching writing along with tips on the
use of automated analysis in the classroom. Next the book
highlights the capabilities and applications of several scoring
engines including the E-rater (R), the Intelligent Essay Assessor,
the Intellimetric (TM) engine, c-rater (TM), and LightSIDE. Here
readers will find an actual application of the use of an AEE in
West Virginia, psychometric issues related to AEEs such as
validity, reliability, and scaling, and the use of automated
scoring to detect reader drift, grammatical errors, discourse
coherence quality, and the impact of human rating on AEEs. A review
of the cognitive foundations underlying methods used in AEE is also
provided. The book concludes with a comparison of the various AEE
systems and speculation about the future of the field in light of
current educational policy. Ideal for educators, professionals,
curriculum specialists, and administrators responsible for
developing writing programs or distance learning curricula, those
who teach using AEE technologies, policy makers, and researchers in
education, writing, psychometrics, cognitive psychology, and
computational linguistics, this book also serves as a reference for
graduate courses on automated essay evaluation taught in education,
computer science, language, linguistics, and cognitive psychology.
This paper describes ongoing work in automated essay scoring that
will extend the applicability of models that are currently used for
short-essay documents (i-e., less than 500 words). Sponsored by the
Fund for ' Improvement of Post-Secondary Education (FIPSE), the
project would create norms for documents that might normally be
found in an electronic portfolio such as critiques, self-reflective
writing, reports of empirical research, and technical reports.
These norms and the software are posted on a Web site and will be
made available at no cost for a period of 5 years. The paper
describes the project, the desired use of electronic portfolios,
and the four major automated essay scoring programs: (1) Project
Essay Grade; (2) IntelliMetric; (3) Intelligent Essay Assessor; and
(4) e-rater. How this technology can help evaluate postsecondary
general education/principles of undergraduate learning is also
discussed. (Contains 19 references.) (Author/SLD.
|
You may like...
The Stonekeeper
Kazu Kibuishi
Paperback
(1)
R348
R320
Discovery Miles 3 200
|