What Makes Children's Responses to Creativity Assessments Difficult to Judge Reliably?

被引:7
|
作者
Dumas, Denis [1 ,6 ]
Acar, Selcuk [2 ]
Berthiaume, Kelly [2 ]
Organisciak, Peter [3 ]
Eby, David [4 ]
Grajzel, Katalin [3 ]
Vlaamster, Theadora [2 ]
Newman, Michele [5 ]
Carrera, Melanie [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Georgia, Athens, GA USA
[2] Univ North Texas, Denton, TX USA
[3] Univ Denver, Denver, CO USA
[4] Univ Illinois, Champaign, IL USA
[5] Univ Washington, Seattle, WA USA
[6] Univ Georgia, Dept Educ Psychol, 624 Aderhold Hall,110 Carlton St, Athens, GA 30602 USA
来源
JOURNAL OF CREATIVE BEHAVIOR | 2023年 / 57卷 / 03期
关键词
creativity; creativity assessment; divergent thinking; elementary school; creativity judgments; DIVERGENT-THINKING; MEASUREMENT INVARIANCE; DEFINITION; SELECTION; RATERS; TESTS;
D O I
10.1002/jocb.588
中图分类号
G44 [教育心理学];
学科分类号
0402 ; 040202 ;
摘要
Open-ended verbal creativity assessments are commonly administered in psychological research and in educational practice to elementary-aged children. Children's responses are then typically rated by teams of judges who are trained to identify original ideas, hopefully with a degree of inter-rater agreement. Even in cases where the judges are reliable, some residual disagreement on the originality of the responses is inevitable. Here, we modeled the predictors of inter-rater disagreement in a large (i.e., 387 elementary school students and 10,449 individual item responses) dataset of children's creativity assessment responses. Our five trained judges rated the responses with a high degree of consistency reliability (alpha = 0.844), but we undertook this study to predict the residual disagreement. We used an adaptive LASSO model to predict 72% of the variance in our judges' residual disagreement and found that there were certain types of responses on which our judges tended to disagree more. The main effects in our model showed that responses that were less original, more elaborate, prompted by a Uses task, from younger children, or from male students, were all more difficult for the judges to rate reliably. Among the interaction effects, we found that our judges were also more likely to disagree on highly original responses from Gifted/Talented students, responses from Latinx students who were identified as English Language Learners, or responses from Asian students who took a lot of time on the task. Given that human judgments such as these are currently being used to train artificial intelligence systems to rate responses to creativity assessments, we believe understanding their nuances is important.
引用
收藏
页码:419 / 438
页数:20
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] What Makes People Sick? The Drawing Method and Burmese Refugee Children's Conceptualisation of Health and Illness
    Liamputtong, Pranee
    Fernandes, Sydel
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF QUALITATIVE METHODS, 2016, 15 (01):
  • [32] Bad kids and bad feelings: What children's literature teaches about ADHD, creativity, and openness
    Stearns, Clio
    CURRICULUM INQUIRY, 2015, 45 (04) : 410 - 426
  • [33] RETRACTED: WHAT IS THE IMPORTANCE AND IMPACT OF ILLUSTRATIONS IN CHILDREN'S BOOKS? AN INVESTIGATION INTO CHILDREN'S RESPONSES TO ILLUSTRATIONS (Retracted Article)
    Al-Hinaai, Samiya Nasser Said
    5TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE OF EDUCATION, RESEARCH AND INNOVATION (ICERI 2012), 2012, : 3949 - 3954
  • [34] ?Nature makes people happy, that?s what it sort of means:? children?s definitions and perceptions of nature in rural Northwestern Ontario
    Tillmann, Suzanne
    Button, Brenton
    Coen, Stephanie E.
    Gilliland, Jason A.
    CHILDRENS GEOGRAPHIES, 2019, 17 (06) : 705 - 718
  • [35] COVID-19-RELATED DEATHS AND CHILDREN'S TRAUMATIC STRESS REACTIONS: WHAT MAKES THESE DEATHS DIFFERENT?
    Cohen, Judith A.
    JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY OF CHILD AND ADOLESCENT PSYCHIATRY, 2022, 61 (10): : S41 - S41
  • [36] “I can be the Judge of What’s Serious”: A Qualitative Pilot Study of Parents’ Responses to Messaging About Side Effects of the HPV Vaccine
    Ryan P. Theis
    Brittny A. Wells
    Stephanie A. S. Staras
    Maternal and Child Health Journal, 2020, 24 : 456 - 461
  • [37] What helps children learn difficult tasks: A teacher's presence may be worth more than a screen
    Kostyrka-Allchorne, Katarzyna
    Holland, Amanda
    Cooper, Nicholas R.
    Ahamed, Woakil
    Marrow, Rachel K.
    Simpson, Andrew
    TRENDS IN NEUROSCIENCE AND EDUCATION, 2019, 17
  • [38] "I can be the Judge of What's Serious": A Qualitative Pilot Study of Parents' Responses to Messaging About Side Effects of the HPV Vaccine
    Theis, Ryan P.
    Wells, Brittny A.
    Staras, Stephanie A. S.
    MATERNAL AND CHILD HEALTH JOURNAL, 2020, 24 (04) : 456 - 461
  • [39] Using Latent Class Analysis to Analyze Children's Responses to the Question, "What Is a Day?"
    Harlow, Danielle B.
    Swanson, Lauren H.
    Nylund-Gibson, Karen
    Truxler, Adam
    SCIENCE EDUCATION, 2011, 95 (03) : 477 - 496
  • [40] 'That's what makes me better': Investigating children and adolescents' experiences of pain communication with healthcare professionals in paediatric rheumatology
    Lee, Rebecca Rachael
    Mountain, Danielle
    Connelly, Mark
    Palermo, Tonya M.
    Peters, Sarah
    Cordingley, Lis
    McDonagh, Janet E.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PAIN, 2023, 27 (01) : 111 - 128