Papers
Topics
Authors
Recent
Gemini 2.5 Flash
Gemini 2.5 Flash
80 tokens/sec
GPT-4o
59 tokens/sec
Gemini 2.5 Pro Pro
43 tokens/sec
o3 Pro
7 tokens/sec
GPT-4.1 Pro
50 tokens/sec
DeepSeek R1 via Azure Pro
28 tokens/sec
2000 character limit reached

Generative Grading: Near Human-level Accuracy for Automated Feedback on Richly Structured Problems (1905.09916v5)

Published 23 May 2019 in cs.LG, cs.CY, and stat.ML

Abstract: Access to high-quality education at scale is limited by the difficulty of providing student feedback on open-ended assignments in structured domains like computer programming, graphics, and short response questions. This problem has proven to be exceptionally difficult: for humans, it requires large amounts of manual work, and for computers, until recently, achieving anything near human-level accuracy has been unattainable. In this paper, we present generative grading: a novel computational approach for providing feedback at scale that is capable of accurately grading student work and providing nuanced, interpretable feedback. Our approach uses generative descriptions of student cognition, written as probabilistic programs, to synthesise millions of labelled example solutions to a problem; we then learn to infer feedback for real student solutions based on this cognitive model. We apply our methods to three settings. In block-based coding, we achieve a 50% improvement upon the previous best results for feedback, achieving super-human accuracy. In two other widely different domains -- graphical tasks and short text answers -- we achieve major improvement over the previous state of the art by about 4x and 1.5x respectively, approaching human accuracy. In a real classroom, we ran an experiment where we used our system to augment human graders, yielding doubled grading accuracy while halving grading time.

User Edit Pencil Streamline Icon: https://streamlinehq.com
Authors (8)
  1. Ali Malik (13 papers)
  2. Mike Wu (30 papers)
  3. Vrinda Vasavada (1 paper)
  4. Jinpeng Song (2 papers)
  5. Madison Coots (5 papers)
  6. John Mitchell (21 papers)
  7. Noah Goodman (57 papers)
  8. Chris Piech (33 papers)
Citations (9)