Abstract

AbstractGenerating short answer questions is a popular form of learnersourcing with benefits for both the students’ higher-order thinking and the instructors’ collection of assessment items. However, assessing the quality of the student-generated questions can involve significant efforts from instructors and domain experts. In this work, we investigate the feasibility of leveraging students to generate short answer questions with minimal scaffolding and machine learning models to evaluate the student-generated questions. We had 143 students across 7 online college-level chemistry courses participate in an activity where they were prompted to generate a short answer question regarding the content they were presently learning. Using both human and automatic evaluation methods, we investigated the linguistic and pedagogical quality of these student-generated questions. Our results showed that 32% of the student-generated questions were evaluated by experts as high quality, indicating that they could be added and used in the course in their present condition. Additional expert evaluation identified that 23% of the student-generated questions assessed higher cognitive processes according to Bloom’s Taxonomy. We also identified the strengths and weaknesses of using a state-of-the-art language model, GPT-3, to automatically evaluate the student-generated questions. Our findings suggest that students are relatively capable of generating short answer questions that can be leveraged in their online courses. Based on the evaluation methods, recommendations for leveraging experts and automatic methods are discussed.KeywordsQuestion generationQuestion qualityQuestion evaluation

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