Dissertation marking assistance
Dissertation marking assistance
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Discussion

Road2Ruin

Original Poster:

6,345 posts

242 months

Wednesday 27th May
quotequote all
Not sure which forum to out this in, so here it is.

My daughter has completed her dissertation and the grade is separated into two parts. She gets 85% for the written part and 15% for an oral presentation = 100%.

She has received a mark for the written of 54%, but nothing for the oral yet. We jave no idea how to calculate the potential final mark. Is the 54%, 54% of 85%, or is it 54%? Then will whatever mark she gets on the oral presentation be added to this? So a possible max of 69%?
She seems to think it may be the former, not the latter, but that doesnt make any sense to me.

Anyone have any input?

Thanks.

Mr Penguin

4,401 posts

65 months

Wednesday 27th May
quotequote all
Would usually be 54% on the piece of work being done, presumably when she did coursework that was worth 10% of a module she didn't get 5.4%.

QuickQuack

2,722 posts

127 months

Wednesday 27th May
quotequote all
For bachelor's degrees and post grad qualifications, it would normally be the former, i.e., she has received 54% of the 85%, so she has accumulated 45.9% of the total so far.

Road2Ruin

Original Poster:

6,345 posts

242 months

Wednesday 27th May
quotequote all
QuickQuack said:
For bachelor's degrees and post grad qualifications, it would normally be the former, i.e., she has received 54% of the 85%, so she has accumulated 45.9% of the total so far.
That's what she seems to think. That system doesnt make any sense to me, though. Why not just day 45.9%. Anyway, we must deal with it, if that is what it is...
Being a parent huh...

QuickQuack

2,722 posts

127 months

Wednesday 27th May
quotequote all
Road2Ruin said:
QuickQuack said:
For bachelor's degrees and post grad qualifications, it would normally be the former, i.e., she has received 54% of the 85%, so she has accumulated 45.9% of the total so far.
That's what she seems to think. That system doesnt make any sense to me, though. Why not just day 45.9%. Anyway, we must deal with it, if that is what it is...
Being a parent huh...
It's because you mark each component out of 100%, which is the easiest way of marking any single exam, essay, dissertation, viva voce etc., then you weight the final score based on the contribution of each component. Doing a weighted calculation is easier than marking a component out of 15, 85 or any other random number.

Being a parent is hard, sorry! Two of ours are done with university, additional and higher degrees, one still starting her GCSEs!

Road2Ruin

Original Poster:

6,345 posts

242 months

Wednesday 27th May
quotequote all
QuickQuack said:
It's because you mark each component out of 100%, which is the easiest way of marking any single exam, essay, dissertation, viva voce etc., then you weight the final score based on the contribution of each component. Doing a weighted calculation is easier than marking a component out of 15, 85 or any other random number.

Being a parent is hard, sorry! Two of ours are done with university, additional and higher degrees, one still starting her GCSEs!
I get that, thanks, but why not just say...it's 45.9% of your total mark. It seems unnecessarily complicated.

She has a few other assignments still to be marked, so fingers crossed. Last year she was bordering a first. The end of this year, who knows.

CaptainScarlet1967

456 posts

11 months

Wednesday 27th May
quotequote all
Road2Ruin said:
I get that, thanks, but why not just say...it's 45.9% of your total mark. It seems unnecessarily complicated.

She has a few other assignments still to be marked, so fingers crossed. Last year she was bordering a first. The end of this year, who knows.
I think it's just to keep the component parts distinct, and possibly even show what the student needs to aim for in order to achieve X per cent overall, in this case 24.1% from the 15% viva.

Fingers crossed she gets the First or they bump the classification up if close enough.

Universities are inconsistent with assessments, discretion and accountability, IME. I did a joint-honours degree and in my first year, our grades for the main course were 100% exam-based, which was hugely unfair, whereas the single-honours students had 80% exam and 20% coursework (which I think is better than the 85/15 split for your daughter's dissertation).

That changed by my final year: single- and joint-honours students did coursework, but they shifted the goalposts and said that that year they weren't going to exercise discretion to bump classifications up.

Ergo, one 'favourite' student I knew the previous year was bumped up something like 5% to a First, whereas in the year I graduated, someone really brighy on around 68/69.something% was not and had to make do with a 2:1.

Meanwhile, no discretion was there (apparently) to bump students like me up to a 2:1 despite being within the catchment zone in previous years, so I graduated with a Desmond (2:2).

rodericb

8,699 posts

152 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
It should be set out in the subject guide or whatever. There should be some sort of schema (aka rubric) which shows how assessment is done, for each component of the assessment, and then how the marks from those components (written and verbal in this case) go to form the final mark.

cobra kid

5,530 posts

266 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
Road2Ruin said:
Anyway, we must deal with it, if that is what it is...
Being a parent huh...
No, she must deal with it. She's doing the work.

Bill

57,996 posts

281 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
Road2Ruin said:
I get that, thanks, but why not just say...it's 45.9% of your total mark. It seems unnecessarily complicated.
This makes less sense. How do you know how well you've done? It gives you no clue about your grade

CaptainScarlet1967

456 posts

11 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
Bill said:
Road2Ruin said:
I get that, thanks, but why not just say...it's 45.9% of your total mark. It seems unnecessarily complicated.
This makes less sense. How do you know how well you've done? It gives you no clue about your grade
It is still useful data, as it shows students any 'shortfall' in one component part and what marks they need to achieve in the other component part in order to achieve X overall for that particular module.

Sometimes these can make or break a degree classification, and even help students work out what marks they need to average or achieve across other modules, or borrow from previous years, in order to achieve a final grade for the degree.

It requires maths, and to an extent it potentially entails tactical choices of elective modules.

Bill

57,996 posts

281 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
CaptainScarlet1967 said:
It is still useful data...
All true, but it's easily calculated and as a standalone figure is meaningless.

jeremyc

27,583 posts

310 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
Am I the only one concerned that someone is (hopefully) about to graduate with a degree and can't work this out? irked

parabolica

6,977 posts

210 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
jeremyc said:
Am I the only one concerned that someone is (hopefully) about to graduate with a degree and can't work this out? irked
It depends entirely on how the university have chosen to divvy up the scoring, and if this is public information for the students or not.

I had something similar for my degree (written % + oral % = final %) but my friend on a different course at the same uni was completely different.

hyperblue

2,872 posts

206 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
jeremyc said:
Am I the only one concerned that someone is (hopefully) about to graduate with a degree and can't work this out? irked
Quite!

QuickQuack

2,722 posts

127 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
hyperblue said:
jeremyc said:
Am I the only one concerned that someone is (hopefully) about to graduate with a degree and can't work this out? irked
Quite!
Or they just want their parents off their back and have given the said parent a calculation they know their parent can't cope with... hehe

Collectingbrass

2,843 posts

221 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
Back in my day it was common knowledge that at least one of the lecturers simply weighed the submissions(*) and gave a mark based on that. Perhaps a set of scales are in order?

(*)Perhaps brown envelopes were expected, I couldn't possibly comment, but as he was Egyptian and we had 6 Iraqis on the course, pre GW1, I may not be as far off the mark as I think I am

snuffy

12,823 posts

310 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
CaptainScarlet1967 said:
Meanwhile, no discretion was there (apparently) to bump students like me up to a 2:1 despite being within the catchment zone in previous years, so I graduated with a Desmond (2:2).
My final percentage was a 2:2. However, I was awarded a 2:1.

Ive always been very pleased about that.

Phil.

5,835 posts

276 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
snuffy said:
My final percentage was a 2:2. However, I was awarded a 2:1.

Ive always been very pleased about that.
That was in the old days. There is no discretion nowadays unless there are evidenced extenuating circumstances. Otherwise it’s just about number crunching and rule following (arse covering in case of an appeal).

I much preferred when we had some discretion based on the overall perceived performance of the individual and how they would represent the university going forward. But in those days you got to know each of the students overall several years and that doesn’t happen now.

OP - your daughter is most likely to achieve a 2:2 award for her dissertation (50%-60%) unless she performs exceptionally well in her oral exam. The overall award for her degree will obviously be dependent on her performance in other modules but is unlikely to achieve a first given the likely dissertation result.

Road2Ruin

Original Poster:

6,345 posts

242 months

Thursday 28th May
quotequote all
Phil. said:
That was in the old days. There is no discretion nowadays unless there are evidenced extenuating circumstances. Otherwise it s just about number crunching and rule following (arse covering in case of an appeal).

I much preferred when we had some discretion based on the overall perceived performance of the individual and how they would represent the university going forward. But in those days you got to know each of the students overall several years and that doesn t happen now.

OP - your daughter is most likely to achieve a 2:2 award for her dissertation (50%-60%) unless she performs exceptionally well in her oral exam. The overall award for her degree will obviously be dependent on her performance in other modules but is unlikely to achieve a first given the likely dissertation result.
Thanks, Phil, that is what I think we are looking at.