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PeaceWave

(3,333 posts)
72. This is exactly as I recall, except that it was this way in both undergrad and grad school...
Wed Mar 25, 2026, 07:04 PM
21 hrs ago

The funny thing is that if you ever contested a score, the whole veil of anonymity collapsed - since you had to sit down with your Professor or TA and go over the exam in person. That was rare though. The only time I had to do that was when the person grading the exam clearly missed a couple of pages worth of answers, which drastically altered my score. Fun times.

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Excellent! SheltieLover Yesterday #1
Sounds good until you consider the issue of anonymity... PeaceWave Yesterday #2
How is that any different from grading written assignments? Coventina Yesterday #3
At all the colleges I attended, finals/midterms were submitted with randomly assigned numbers - not names... PeaceWave Yesterday #6
I have never encountered such a system in all my years of being a student or professor. n/t Coventina Yesterday #7
That's how it was (and, I am sure, still is) done throughout the entire University of California system. PeaceWave Yesterday #11
I'll take your word for it in regards to UC, but I'm pretty confident that's not the norm. Coventina Yesterday #12
This is the direct quote from U.C. Berkeley Law's academic guidelines... PeaceWave Yesterday #15
OK, so that's law school. And only testing, not other forms of assignments. Coventina Yesterday #16
I literally just wrote..."The same rule is mirrored at all UC campuses, law school and undergrad alike." PeaceWave Yesterday #17
Please provide the link that says this applies to all undergrad programs. n/t Coventina Yesterday #18
Google each campus and "anonymous grading" and you'll find your link... PeaceWave Yesterday #20
I just did so and according to Google (which you recommended) it only applies to law schools Coventina Yesterday #21
I'm not going through all 30+ campuses. But, this should suffice since, for whatever reason, you don't believe me... PeaceWave Yesterday #23
So, it is used sporadically and is not mandatory. n/t Coventina Yesterday #25
Believe whatever you choose. But, having attended UCs for both undergraduate and graduate school... PeaceWave Yesterday #29
All I can say is that your experience has been nothing like mine, either as a student or professor. Coventina Yesterday #31
Anonymous grading probably sprung out of the politics at UC campuses... PeaceWave Yesterday #37
Well, your assertions about what is "policy" is being disputed here by more posters Coventina Yesterday #39
I'm entirely confident in what I personally witnessed in the UC System... PeaceWave Yesterday #41
Ummmmm Okay. Coventina Yesterday #43
You didn't go through all teh campuses because most don't do this, and there aren't 30+ obamanut2012 Yesterday #33
There are 30+ UC and Cal State schools. PeaceWave Yesterday #38
Because they are incorrect obamanut2012 Yesterday #32
Thanks! A more informed voice is much appreciated here. nt Coventina Yesterday #36
That is not correct about the University of California system. nt PufPuf23 Yesterday #28
Yup, it is not accurate obamanut2012 Yesterday #34
Absolutely not true wackadoo wabbit 8 hrs ago #83
The vast majority of the grade for every university course I taught was anonymous. Ms. Toad 23 hrs ago #56
This is exactly as I recall, except that it was this way in both undergrad and grad school... PeaceWave 21 hrs ago #72
I'm pretty sure my undergrad and MS grades weren't anonymously graded. Ms. Toad 19 hrs ago #76
The old joke at Berkeley when I was an undergrad there was about the guy who... PeaceWave 19 hrs ago #77
As a professor, that wouldn't have worked with me. Ms. Toad 18 hrs ago #81
No such thing in the performing or fine arts. progressoid Yesterday #24
Not one of mine did that -- either as a student ro instructor obamanut2012 Yesterday #30
My wife has been a college professor for 30 years... Happy Hoosier Yesterday #44
Seems odd OC375 Yesterday #13
Any objective research into how large your asserted problem is nationwide? Torchlight Yesterday #19
I think a better approach would be a written exam, in class, with the questions delivered orally. Trueblue Texan 23 hrs ago #51
Isn't a "take home exam" just fancy talk for "homework"? OC375 22 hrs ago #61
Take home exams were miserable. You ended up working all night on them. Better to get it done in 3 hours. PeaceWave 22 hrs ago #64
LOL. To each their own. :) OC375 21 hrs ago #71
God no. 3 hours. Crush that thing. On to the next. Then, party like hell when it's all done. PeaceWave 21 hrs ago #73
For more advanced courses, a 3 hour exam can't... Lucky Luciano 21 hrs ago #70
Count me incredibly unsurprised... And good on them for doing this... hlthe2b Yesterday #4
Great idea Mysterian Yesterday #5
Just have them write essays and solve math problems by writing in a blue book. Jacson6 Yesterday #8
Bingo. Those were the days. You were handed the questions and you had 3 hours to get it done. PeaceWave 23 hrs ago #46
never heard of a blue book. can you give a bit more detail? i figure if i google it then i'll get a lot of links about orleans 22 hrs ago #57
It was a multipage blank paper notebook with a blue cover. Jacson6 22 hrs ago #59
A Blue Book had 12 sheets of paper...24 pages front and back. You were cruising if you needed a second book. PeaceWave 22 hrs ago #60
thanks. that helps. nt orleans 22 hrs ago #62
I may have been among the last to use a blue book fujiyamasan 22 hrs ago #66
Excellent Idea OC375 Yesterday #9
This is an effective way to defeat cheating via AI FakeNoose Yesterday #10
I've given up on trying to teach my students writing. Coventina Yesterday #14
I completely agree, the remedial work needs to be done before they get to your classes FakeNoose Yesterday #35
Given the obstacles, it appears the most honest method Torchlight Yesterday #22
This should have been done years before AI synni Yesterday #26
I like it... 2naSalit Yesterday #27
I am an art prof Starry Messenger Yesterday #40
I contend that testing is pointless. Gore1FL Yesterday #42
That's the thing. I stopped giving tests years ago. Coventina Yesterday #45
Sad you have to outwit learners nowadays OC375 21 hrs ago #69
I'm confused. Students are accessing their phones during the test? CrispyQ 22 hrs ago #58
I research everyday for a living in my IT job. Gore1FL 22 hrs ago #63
So open book is okay, but not Google or AI. Right? -nt CrispyQ 22 hrs ago #65
I use Google regularly. I have used AI, but prefer Google. Gore1FL 20 hrs ago #75
That's not what the discussion is about, but okay. -nt CrispyQ 19 hrs ago #79
It was an answer to your question. If the answer is off-topic, that's on you. nt Gore1FL 18 hrs ago #80
One on one discussions sound great. But aren't they time-consuming? Jim__ 23 hrs ago #47
Fortunately, I have fairly small classes. Coventina 23 hrs ago #48
That sounds great! Jim__ 23 hrs ago #49
I had to do one of these just to get my Bachelors kairos12 23 hrs ago #50
My kid had to write a thesis on a topic related to his major and defend it to graduate from his liberal arts college. Raftergirl 23 hrs ago #52
just a thought lapfog_1 23 hrs ago #53
i dont do well on written tests , so i always asked for oral tests , in fact, AllaN01Bear 23 hrs ago #54
No Critical Thinking Pucks mom 23 hrs ago #55
AI has taken a wrecking ball to education: highplainsdem 21 hrs ago #74
Long overdue. Raven123 22 hrs ago #67
I approve this wholeheartedly. Lucky Luciano 22 hrs ago #68
I refuse to use it gay texan 19 hrs ago #78
That's always been a major component of science fair judging. hunter 18 hrs ago #82
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