Student Peer Assessments

Find tools to help you incorporate student peer assessments at UBC. These tools are categorized by those that let students review one another’s work and those that let students review one another’s performance in a group. All of these tools are recommended by the LT Hub and receive central technical and pedagogical support.

Assessing Work with Student Peer Assessments

UBC centrally supports four student peer assessment tools that can facilitate assignments where students can review, rate, and/or leave formative feedback on each other’s work.

General Tips


Compare the tools

Compare the main features among the four centrally supported tools for students assessing peer work at UBC.

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Criteria  Canvas CLAS ComPAIR peerScholar
What are the strengths?
  • Generally straightforward and quick to set up
  • Part of Canvas
  • Option to manually assign what work each peer will review
  • Peers interactively review multimedia
  • Feedback can include contextual comments and time-specific annotations
  • Option to give feedback using audio or video in addition to text
  • Option for students to review work in a subset of the class or class-wide
  • Peers see work in pairs and can use comparative judgement in reviewing
  • Option to pair work adaptively, so pairs are selected based on similar quality
  • At the end, students can see all peer work
  • High flexibility in how peer reviews can be set up, scheduled, and factored into grades
  • Option to have students review the peer feedback they receive and/or resubmit work
  • Students can get different "cases" (instructions), then review only the same or only different cases
What are the limitations?
  • Limited follow-up activities
  • Peer review cannot be graded in the Canvas Gradebook; only the student's assignment submission can be graded
  • Students always know whose work they are reviewing
  • Not built specifically for peer review, so extra instructions are needed for students to know where to submit and whose work to review
  • No grades automatically sent to the Canvas Gradebook; grades must be added manually
  • Students cannot annotate work directly
  • Students must answer criteria by picking which peer work in the pair better meets each criterion
  • Different phase deadlines within a single assignment (e.g. answering, comparing, self-evaluating) will not appear in Canvas for students, so you will need to pick one as the Canvas due date
  • High flexibility in peerScholar means it can take longer to set up
  • Including all the peer review options for assignments means students need more time to finish
  • Different phase deadlines within a single assignment (e.g. submitting, assessing, and reflecting) will not appear in Canvas for students, so you will need to pick one as the Canvas due date
Canvas CLAS ComPAIR peerScholar
Work done by peers? Yes Yes Yes Yes
Their own work? No Yes Yes Yes
Feedback from peers? No No No Yes
In what format(s) can students submit work for review? Text,
images,
video,
audio,
equations,
PDFs
Images,
video,
audio,
PDFs
Text,
images,
video,
audio,
equations,
PDFs
Text,
images,
video,
audio,
equations,
PDFs
Canvas CLAS ComPAIR peerScholar
Who can submit work for review? Individuals,
groups
Individuals Individuals,
groups
Individuals,
groups
In what ways can students provide feedback? Comment box (may include video or audio),
annotations (on PDF, Word doc, PowerPoint, or image—when reviewing is not anonymous),
instructor-set rubrics (multiple-choice questions)
Comment box (may include video or audio),
annotations (on video, audio, image, or PDF)
Comment box,
instructor-set rubrics (questions for choosing between answer pairs)
Comment box,
annotations (only on text),
instructor-set rubrics (multiple choice, star rating, matrix rating, dropdown, checkbox, scale, points),
file attachment
How can students be assigned reviews? Randomly or manually assigned Not assigned
(students must be instructed which work to review)
Randomly assigned Randomly assigned
Can students submit a group assignment and be given other group submissions to review? Yes No
(students can only be assigned to groups to review work submitted by individuals within the group)
Yes Yes
Can students be manually assigned to groups of more than two people to review work submitted by individuals within the group? Yes Yes No
(one student submits on behalf of the group, and each student within the group reviews other group submissions)
Yes
Do student assessments result in a numeric value calculated by the tool? Yes No Yes Yes
Can students review without knowing who they review? Yes
(feedback must also be anonymous)
No Yes Yes
Can students receive feedback without knowing who it is from? Yes
(reviewing must also be anonymous)
Yes Yes Yes
Canvas CLAS ComPAIR peerScholar
Can a grade be generated, without any extra steps from the instructor? No
(grades must be entered manually)
No
(grades must be entered manually)
Yes
(participation-based)
Yes
(rubric-based and/or
participation-based)
Can grades be passed from the tool to the Canvas Gradebook? No No Yes
(once configured, participation grades will be passed)
Yes
(manually initiate syncing by clicking a button in peerScholar)


Read about the tools

canvas-logo Canvas

 

Cost:
Free

Bandwidth:
Low demand

Privacy:
Verified by UBC’s Privacy Impact Assessment process.

Canvas Peer Review

Facilitate simple student peer assessments in Canvas.

What are the benefits?

  • Canvas Peer Review applies a streamlined use of peer review that can be relatively quick to set up.
  • If you’re already using Canvas, these assignments will happen in a familiar interface for you and your students.
  • You can manually assign what work each peer will review.
  • Students can provide direct annotations on peer work, provided the review is anonymous and the work is submitted as a .pdf, .docx, or .pptx file.

Get started »


 

Cost:
Free

Bandwidth:
High demand

Privacy:
Verified by UBC’s Privacy Impact Assessment process.

Collaborative Learning Annotation System (CLAS)

Add granular peer review to multimedia like videos and images.

What are the benefits?

  • CLAS allows peers to interactively review multimedia like images, videos, audio files, and PDFs.
  • You can have students discuss multimedia using contextual comments and time-specific annotations and review the work yourself using the same tools.
  • You can have students review work in a subset of the class or class-wide to generate different levels of discussion.
  • Feedback can be given using audio or video in addition to text.

Get started »


compair-logo

 

Cost:
Free

Bandwidth:
Low demand

Privacy:
ComPAIR is developed and maintained at UBC.

ComPAIR

Have students compare and comment on peer work presented in pairs.

What are the benefits?

  • Looking at pairs of work helps students identify strengths and weaknesses of each individual work, using their innate skill of comparative judgement.
  • You can have the tool work adaptively, so pairs are selected based on similar quality.
  • At the end, students can see all peer work for broader comparison.

Get started »


peerScholar logo peerScholar

 

Cost:
Free

Bandwidth:
Low demand

Privacy:
Verified by UBC’s Privacy Impact Assessment process.

peerScholar

Ask students to review work and review the feedback they receive using highly flexible rubrics.

What are the benefits?

  • The tool supports three assessment types that offer different peer review configurations: one for individual student assignments, another for assignments that have varying instructions for scenario-based learning (i.e., cases) and a third for group submissions.
  • The flexible customization options allow you to set the questions and format of the student responses, as well as how final grades are calculated.
  • You can can enhance fairness and include additional learning opportunities by having students review the peer feedback they receive or submit a revision of their work.

Get started »

Assessing Teamwork with Student Peer Assessments

UBC centrally supports two student peer assessment tools that invite students to evaluate each other’s contributions to group work and teamwork.

General Tips

  • In planning your assignments, consult the Centre for Teaching, Learning, and Technology’s student peer assessment resources for instructors and students or book a one-on-one consultation for additional guidance.
  • Using student peer assessments formatively can help students understand how their contributions are perceived early on and make any changes before final summative assessments.
  • The student reviews can guide you in assigning fairer individual grades for group projects or other collaborations, as well as promote accountability for the students while working in their groups.

Compare the tools

Compare the main features between the two centrally supported tools for students assessing teamwork at UBC.

Expand All

Criteria  iPeer peerScholar
What are the strengths?
  • Set custom rubrics for review or have each student divvy up a set number of points
  • Tighter integration with Canvas, so reviews can be set up and graded in the tool without needing to enter grades manually in Canvas
  • Works with Canvas group sets
  • Higher flexibility in how peer reviews can be set up
  • Grades can include participation as well as peer review outcomes
  • Peer review outcomes can be calculated multiple ways
  • Works with Canvas group sets
What are the limitations?
  • Workflow and interface may have a higher learning curve
  • Fewer options for how reviews can be set up
  • Students must register in peerScholar before you can set up reviews
  • It may take longer to set up due to the flexibility in the assessment and grading options
iPeer peerScholar
Teamwork skills of peers? Yes Yes
Their own teamwork skills? Yes Yes
iPeer peerScholar
In what ways can students provide feedback? Comment box,
instructor-set rubrics (multiple-choice questions),
point distribution (scale questions)
Comment box,
instructor-set rubrics
(multiple choice, star rating, slider, matrix rating, dropdown, checkbox, scale, points)
Do student assessments result in a numeric value calculated by the tool? Yes Yes
Can students receive feedback without knowing who it is from? Yes Yes
Can students receive feedback knowing who it is from? No Yes
iPeer peerScholar
Can a grade be generated, without any extra steps from the instructor? Yes
(rubric-based and/or point-allocation-based)
Yes
(rubric-based and/or
participation-based)
Can grades be passed from the tool to the Canvas gradebook? Yes
(manually initiate syncing by clicking a button in iPeer)
Yes
(manually initiate syncing by clicking a button in peerScholar)


Read about the tools

ipeer-logo iPeer

 

Cost:
Free

Bandwidth:
Low demand

Privacy:
iPeer is developed and maintained at UBC.

iPeer

Create rubrics and point-allocation evaluations that students use to anonymously review their group members in this UBC-developed tool for evaluating teamwork.

What are the benefits?

  • You can set custom rubrics for students to use in review, or have each student divvy up a set number of points.
  • Assessments can be coordinated with any groups you have already set up in Canvas.

Get started »


peerScholar logo peerScholar

 

Cost:
Free

Bandwidth:
Low demand

Privacy:
Verified by UBC’s Privacy Impact Assessment process.

peerScholar

Create custom rubrics that students use to anonymously review their group members using the “Group Member Evaluation” option in the “Team & Group Work Activity” feature in this tool.

What are the benefits?

  • You can set up peer reviews with a high degree of flexibility, such as enabling anonymous peer review, facilitating qualitative and quantitative peer assessment types, and assigning groups randomly, manually, or by importing them from Canvas.
  • Peer review outcomes and final grades can be calculated multiple ways. You can also choose to include student evaluations as part of the final assessment.

Get started »