hopping around

~ヘタレ研究者は今日も逝く~

grading

Grading exams: 100,99,98,… or A,B,C?

Pradeep Dubeya and John Geanakoplos (Games and Economic Behavior 2010)

the abstract:

We introduce grading into games of status. Each player chooses effort, producing a stochastic output or score. Utilities depend on the ranking of all the scores. By clustering scores into grades, the ranking is coarsened, and the incentives to work are changed.

We apply games of status to grading exams. Our main conclusion is that if students care primarily about their status (relative rank) in class, they are often best motivated to work not by revealing their exact numerical exam scores (100,99,…,1), but instead by clumping them into coarse categories (A,B,C).

When student abilities are disparate, the optimal absolute grading scheme is always coarse. Furthermore, it awards fewer A's than there are alpha-quality students, creating small elites. When students are homogeneous, we characterize optimal absolute grading schemes in terms of the stochastic dominance between student performances (when they shirk or work) on subintervals of scores, showing again why coarse grading may be advantageous.

In both cases, we prove that absolute grading is better than grading on a curve, provided student scores are independent.

んー,まぁ実際には,積み上げ式かどうかで,点数の付き方は変わるので,これがそのまま使えるという訳にはいかないなぁ。