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Research Article

Are men and women really different? The effects of gender and training on peer scoring and perceptions of peer assessment

 

Abstract

A number of studies have expressed that gender might be a source of difference and bias in peer assessment activities. However, evidence supporting this remains mixed and scant. The present study examined gender difference and accuracy bias between men and women assessors’ peer scoring of same-sex or opposite-sex writing samples using a quasi-experimental approach in which we implemented peer assessment training to explore if it could minimise gender difference and bias. Additionally, we also explored the effects on participants’ perceptions of trust and comfort in giving peer scores. A total of 145 (men = 25) psychology students enrolled in four separate courses participated in this study. Two of the classes received peer assessment training, while the other two only received task instructions. Participants were divided into eight scoring subgroups where they peer scored three writing samples of varying quality (poor, average and excellent) using a scoring rubric in Eduflow. We found that, regardless of their training condition, men and women assessors did not differ in their peer scores of men and women peers. Only untrained men assessors showed less trust in their abilities and discomfort when peer scoring women assessees’ writing samples.

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to express their utmost gratitude to Dr. Ian Llenares, Dr. Rita Aringo, Ms. Nora Agpasa, and Mr. Raj Pallon for their assistance in data gathering. Thanks to Dr. Iván Sánchez for the advice in data analysis, and David Wind for the Eduflow access.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Table 3. Factorial ANOVA results for the poor, average, and excellent writing samples.

Additional information

Funding

The first author of this project has received funding from the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under the Marie Skłodowska Curie grant agreement N° 847624. In addition, a number of institutions backed and co-financed his project. Second and third authors were funded by Spanish National R + D call from the Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (Generación del conocimiento 2019), Reference number: PID2019-108982GB-I00.

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