Grade correspondence between internal and external examiners of occupational therapy students’ bachelor theses
Bonsaksen, Tore; Thørrisen, Mikkel Magnus; Sveen, Unni; Kjeken, Ingvild; Aas, Randi Wågø; Lund, Anne
Journal article, Peer reviewed
Published version
Date
2018-09-20Metadata
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Original version
Bonsaksen T, Thørrisen M, Sveen U, Kjeken I, Aas RW, Lund A. Grade correspondence between internal and external examiners of occupational therapy students’ bachelor theses. UNIPED. 2018;41(3):319-330 http://dx.doi.org/10.18261/ISSN.1893-8981-2018-03-11Abstract
Students’ grades are increasingly important in defining their future employability, and therefore, securing a fair assessment of students’ theses is important. This study aimed to assess the level of grade correspondence between internal and external examiners of occupational therapy students’ bachelor theses, and to evaluate the overall level of grades initially set by examiners in the two groups. The grades initially suggested for 67 bachelor theses were analyzed. Absolute agreement between internal and external examiners was estimated as the proportion of theses on which the examiners suggested identical grades (percentage agreement), and consistency in agreement was estimated by the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC). There was absolute agreement between the internal and the external examiners in 33 of the 67 cases (49.3 %), and also consistency in agreement was high (ICC = 0.81, 95 % CI [0.68, 0.88], p < 0.001). The results from this study demonstrate a high level of agreement between internal and external examiners of occupational therapy students’ bachelor theses. However, internal examiners as a group are more prone to give high grades compared to external examiners, and this may support the continued use of two examiners to ensure quality in grading.
Publisher
UniversitetsforlagetSeries
UNIPED;Årgang 41, Nr. 3Journal
UNIPED
Except where otherwise noted, this item's license is described as © 2018 Author(s). This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC-BY License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/).
Creative Commons-lisensen er mer spesifikt Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0).