The Sweep: Essential Examples for In-Flow Peer Review
Joe Gibbs Politz, Joseph M. Collard, Arjun Guha, Kathi Fisler, Shriram Krishnamurthi
ACM Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, 2016
Abstract
In in-flow peer review, students provide feedback to one another on intermediate artifacts on their way to a final submission. Prior work has studied examples and tests as a potentially useful initial artifact for review. Unfortunately, large test suites are onerous to produce and especially to review. We instead propose the notion of a sweep, an artificially constrained set of tests that illustrates common and interesting behavior. We present experimental data across several courses that show that sweeps have reasonable quality, and are also a good target for peer review; for example, students usually (over half the time) suggest new tests to one another in a review.
Comment
See the prior work on a tool for in-flow peer review and preliminary analysis about testing. See also our report on in-flow peer-review.
Paper
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