Skip to content
/ ACCESS Public

ACCESS (Assistive Course Creation and Evaluation of Student Submissions Tool) was developed by Alexander Hofmann, Philip Hofmann, Mervin Cheok and Luka Lapanashvili during their master studies in computer science at the University of Zuerich UZH. ACCESS has successfully been used in production for a semester by 450 students.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

Phhofm/ACCESS

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

5 Commits
 
 

Repository files navigation

ACCESS

General info

ACCESS was developed by Alexander Hofmann, Philip Hofmann, Mervin Cheok and Luka Lapanashvili, during their master studies in computer science for the Departement of Informatics at university of zuerich UZH. These developers subsequently got hired by the university to deploy, maintain and extend this system for a semester, resulting in around 450 students solving, handing in and instantly recieving grades for their weekly python programming exercises.

More information is available on our website, in our report, or in our gitbook.

I had also created a youtube video about out project: Watch the video

In case of the above website not working, have a look on the internet archive: home and team pages

We made our tool open source. So anyone can feel free to use this tool for their own courses or to fork it and extend the tool with further functionality or simpler deployment options.

This repository only contains this README, you find the code of the project in the following repositories:

The Infrastructure repository contains the configuration and docker-services needed for our application like postgres, mongodb, keycloak

The Backend repository contains our java spring backend and finally the

Frontend repository contains the react frontend.

You can find all of these repos and more information on our organizational page where I forked the repositories from

Context

The Department of Informatics at the University of Zürich (UZH) observed a rapid increase in students for the introductory course "Informatics 1" over the last years.This lecture involves weekly exercises for each student that get manually corrected by tutors that the department hires each semester. In 2018, the department hired 12 tutors to cope with the increasing demands, which resulted in a workload of 30 to 35 exercises to be corrected by each tutor per week. This system of tutors manually correcting the exercises is not scalable, and there are no signs that the number of participants of this course will stabilize nor decrease.

Approach

We envisioned an automated system as a solution to the mentioned problem, which automatically corrects and grades the student exercises for this lecture, while allowing course authors to edit content with their own tools of choice. Furthermore each edit done by the content author will be versioned for transparency. The system allows tutors to switch attention from correcting programming exercises to assisting the students. In contrast to the current situation, the system is scalable and could easily handle a further increase in student numbers. Furthermore, our envisioned system could provide the students with instant feedback, thus enhancing the learning experience. In this thesis, we come up with a design and a system that could solve the mentioned problems. We subsequently got hired by the university to deploy and put in operation our prototype for the semester, while maintaining and updating and extending the live-in-production running prototype with several features needed by the course authors of the "Informatics 1" lecture to adapt the system to the requirements of their respective exercises. The system had then been used for a semester by 450 students to solve their weekly exercises, and we received mostly positive feedback concerning our system.

About

ACCESS (Assistive Course Creation and Evaluation of Student Submissions Tool) was developed by Alexander Hofmann, Philip Hofmann, Mervin Cheok and Luka Lapanashvili during their master studies in computer science at the University of Zuerich UZH. ACCESS has successfully been used in production for a semester by 450 students.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published