Introduction
The assessment module provides OpenACS with capabilities to conduct
surveys, tests and dynamic information gathering in general, as can be
seen in the use cases.
Vision Statement
The motivation behind the Assessment package is to extend the
functionality of the existing Survey package in both depth and breadth:
- more question formats, user response filtering and processing,
versioning, import/export capabilities for standards-based exchange
with non-OpenACS systems, etc.
- mechanisms to embed Assessment capabilities within other
OpenACS packages and to assemble larger systems of packages within
which Assessment is one component (eg dotLRN, clinical trials
management systems, etc)
The current Survey package is a very capable piece of engineering
that provides stand-alone data collection functions. It is
subsite-aware and has been integrated to some extent with portlets. It
also is just being integrated into user registration processes. These
efforts point the path down which the Assessment package intends to
proceed to its logical conclusion.
Development efforts for Assessment thus involve two tracks:
- refinement and extension of the data model and UIs from Survey
(and its sibling forks) to support a variety of expanded user
requirements
- incorporation of hooks (of various sorts, such as Service
Contracts) to integrate Assessment with OpenACS subsystems: Content
Repository, Workflow, Notifications, Internationalization, etc
The measure of success of the Assessment package is the ease with
which it can rapidly be deployed into some high-profile
implementations, notably dotLRN and a clinical trials management system
under development.
Use Cases
The assessment module in it's
simplest form is a dynamic information
gathering tool. This can be clearly seen in the first group of use
cases, which deal with surveys (one form of assessment, e.g. for
quality assurance or clinical trials). An extension of this information
gathering the possibility to conduct an evaluation on the information
given, as we show in the second group of use cases (testing scenarios).
Last but not least, the assessment tool should be able to provide it's
information gathering features to other packages within the OpenACS
framework as well.
It is very important to note, that not all parameters and features
mentioned in this use case should be displayed to the user at all
times. Depending on the use case, a good guess with pre determined
parameters should be made for the user (e.g. no need to let the user
fill out correct answers to questions, if the question is not used in a
test). Some use cases like elections require special parameters not
necessary anywhere else (like counting system).
Survey scenario
The survey scenarios are the
basic use cases for the use of the assessment system.
Simple survey
An editor wants to conduct surveys on his site.
For this purpose he creates questions which are stored in a question
catalogue. From this question catalogue, the editor choose the
questions he wants to use in his current survey along with the style
the survey should be presented to the user. Once satisfied he can make
the survey public or test it first. Once the survey is public subjects
(users) of the site can take the survey by filling out the generated
form with all the questions the author added to the survey.
Quality Assurance
A company wants to get feedback from users
about it's product. It creates a survey which offers branching (to
prevent users from filling out unnecessary data, e.g. if you answered
you have never been to Europe the question "Have you seen Rome" should
not show up) and multi-dimensional likert scales (To ask for the
quality and importance of a part of the product in conjunction).
Professional data entry
A clinic wants to conduct a trial. For
this research assistants are asked to interview the patients and store
the answers in the assessment on behalf of the client. For meeting FDA
requirements it is mandatory to prove exactly who created any datum,
when, whether it is a correct value, whether anyone has looked at it or
edited it and when along with other audit trails. As mistakes might
happen, it is important that the system runs checks on the plausibility
of the entered data and the validity of it (area code should be five
digits, if the age of the patient is below 10, no need to ask for
credit card information, ...).
University survey
A Professor wants to create a test by searching through the question
database and selecting old questions. He searches the database for a
specific keyword or browses by category. The System presents him all
questions which have the keyword and/or category in it. The Professor
is able to preview every question and may then decide which question he
will transfer into the survey.
Internal Evaluation
An institution wants to survey students to compare the quality of
specific courses, teachers, or other factors effecting the quality of
their education and level of happiness.
It should be possible for the person who takes the survey to submit the
survey anonymously and only be able to take the survey once.
It should also be able to show the results of a survey to a group of
users (e.g. a specific department evaluated). The results should be
able to be displayed in a way that give a department a ranking compared
with other departments.
Reuse of questions
The author of multiple choice question
decides that the provided answers are not good for differentiating the
knowledge of the subjects and changes some of them. All editors using
this question should be informed and asked, if they want to use the
changed version or the original one. If the decision is made to switch,
it has to be guaranteed that a distinction between subjects that
answered the original and the new version is kept. In addition the
editor should be able to inform all subjects that have taken the
question already, that it has changed (and that they might (have to)
re-answer).
Multiple languages
The quality assurance team of the company
mentioned above realizes that the majority of it's user base is not
native English speakers. This is why they want to add additional
translations to the questions to broaden the response base. For
consistency, the assessment may only be shown to the subject if all
questions used have been translated. Furthermore it is necessary to
store the language used along with the response (as a translation might
not be as good as the original).
The poll
An editor wants to conduct a poll on the site with
immediate publication of the result to get a feeling how users like the
new design of the website. The result can be displayed in an includelet
(see the below for details) on any page the editor wants.
The election
The OpenACS community wants to conduct a new
election on the OCT. On creation the names of the contestants have to
be available along with a list of all users allowed to vote. Depending
on the election system, the users have one or multiple votes (ranked or
not), which are calculated in a certain way. Once the election is over
the result is published.
Collective Meeting planing
The sailing club needs to find meeting time for all skippers to attend.
Given a number of predefined choices, each skipper can give his/her
preference for the time slots. The slot with the highest approval wins
and is automatically entered into the calendar of all skippers and a
notification send out.
Testing scenario
Especially in the university environment it
is important to be able to conduct tests. These help the students to
prepare for exams but also allow Professors to conduct exams. In
addition to the data collection done in a survey scenario testing adds
checks and instant evaluation to assessment.
Proctored Exam
A Professor wants to have a proctored test in a computer room. He wants
to create the test using question that he has added and are already in
the database. The only people allowed to take the test are the people
that have actually showed up in the room (e.g. restricting the exam to
specific IP-subnet and/or an exam password which he will give the
students in the room at the time of the test that gives them access to
the exam). Additional security measures include:
- Students have to submit the survey signed with their PGP key
(which has been verified by the university) at the end.
- Students have to print out their test and sign every page to
make sure the answers in the system are identical to the ones the
student has given.
- In a purely multiple choice environment, the Test might be
printed out on a sheet of paper for each user along with a return sheet
which needs the answers to be ticked off. A scanner system scans this
return sheet and stores the data for the student in the system.
The Mistake
A Professor has created a test from the question pool and have
administered the exam to a group of students. The test has been taken
by some of his students already. He discovers that the answer to one of
the questions is not correct. He modifies the test and should be given
the option to change the results of exams that have already been
completed and the option to notify students who have taken the test and
received a grade that their results have changed.
Discriminatory power
A Professor has created a test which is taken by all of his students.
The test results should be matched with the individual results to
create the discriminatory power and the reliability of the questions
used in the test. The results should be stored in the question database
and be accessible by every other professor which has the privileges to
access the database of this professor.
[A Question improves the test in reliability if it differentiates in
the context of the test. This is happening if it has discriminatory
power. The Question has discriminatory power if it is splitting good
from bad students within the question in the same way they passes the
test as good and bad students. The discriminatory power tells the
professor if the question matches the test. Example: A hard question
with a high mean value should be answered by good students more often
right than by bad students. If the questions is answered same often by
good and bad students the discriminatory power tells the professor that
the question is more to guess than to know]
The vocabulary test
A student wants to learn a new language.
While attending the class, he enters the vocabulary for each section
into the assessment system. If he wants to check his learned knowledge
he takes the vocabulary test which will show him randomized words to be
translated. Each word will have a ranking stating how probable it is
for the word to show up in the test. With each correct answer the
ranking goes down, with each wrong answer it goes up. Once a section
has been finished and all words have been translated correctly, the
student may proceed to the next section. Possible types of questions:
- Free text translation of a word
- Free text translation of a sentence
- Multiple choice test
- Fill in the blanks
To determine the correct answer it is possible to do a
char-by-char compare and highlight the wrong parts vs. just displaying
the wrong and correct answer (at the end of the test or once the answer
is given).
The quizz
To pep up your website you offer a quiz, which
allows users to answer some (multiple choice) questions and get the
result immediately as a percentage score in a table comparing that
score to other users. Users should be able to answer only a part of the
possible questions each time. If the user is in the top 2%, offer him
the contact address of "Mensa", other percentages should give
encouraging text.
Scoring
The computer science department has a final exam for the students. The
exam consists of 3 sections. The exam is passed, if the student
achieves at least 50% total score. In addition the student has to
achive at least 40% in each of the sections. The first section is
deemed more important, therefore it gets a weigth of 40%, the other two
sections only 30% towards the total score. Each section consists of
multiple questions that have a different weigth (in percent) for the
total score of the section. The sum of the weigths has to be 100%,
otherwise the author of the section get's a warning. Some of the
questions are multiple choice questions, that get different percentages
for each answer. As the computer science department wants to discourage
students from giving wrong answers, some wrong answers have a negative
percentage (thereby reducing the total score in the section).
Reuse in other packages
The information gathering capabilities of the assessment system should
be able to be reused by other packages.
User profiling
In order to join a class at the university the
student has to fill out some questions. The answers can be viewed by
the administrator but also by other students (pending the choice of the
user). This latter functionality should not be part of assessment
itself, but of a different module, making use of assessment. The GPI
user-register is a good example for this.
Includes
Using a CMS the editor wants to include the poll on
the first page on the top right corner. The result should be shown on a
separate page or be included in the CMS as well.
Information gathering for developers
A developer needs
functionality for gathering dynamic information easily. For this he
should be able to easily include an assessment instead of using ad_form
directly in his code. This gives the administrator of the site the
option to change the questions at a later stage (take the questions in
the user sign-up process as an example).
Database questions
Some answers to questions should be stored
directly in database tables of OpenACS in addition to the assessment
system. This is e.g. useful if your questions ask for first_names and
last_name. When answering the question, the user should see the value
currently stored in the database as a default.
Action driven questions
The company conducting the QA wants to
get more participants to it's survey by recommendation. For this each
respondee is asked at the end of the survey if he would recommend this
survey to other users (with the option to give the email address of
these users). The answer will be processed and an email send out to all
given emails inviting them to take the survey.
User Types
There are several types of administrative users and end-users for
the
Assessment package which drive the functional requirements. Here is a
brief synopsis of their responsibilities in this package.
Package-level Administrator
Assigns permissions to other users for administrative roles.
Editor
Has permissions to create, edit, delete and organize in repositories
Assessments, Sections and Items. This includes defining Item formats,
configuring data validation and data integrity checks, configuring
scoring mechanisms, defining sequencing/navigation parameters, etc.
Editors could thus be teachers in schools, principal
investigators or biostatisticians in clinical trials, creative
designers in advertising firms -- or OpenACS developers incorporating a
bit of data collection machinery into another package.
Scheduler
Has permissions to assign, schedule or otherwise map a given
Assessment or set of Assessments to a specific set of subjects,
students or other data entry personnel. These actions potentially will
involve interfacing with other Workflow management tools (e.g. an
"Enrollment" package that would handle creation of new Parties (aka
clinical trial subjects) in the database.
Schedulers could also be teachers, curriculum designers, site
coordinators in clinical trials, etc.
Analyst
Has permissions to search, sort, review and download data collected via
Assessments.
Analysts could be teachers, principals, principal investigators,
biostatisticians, auditors, etc.
Subject
Has permissions to complete an Assessment providing her own
responses or information. This would be a Student, for instance,
completing a test in an educational setting, or a Patient completing a
health-related quality-of-life instrument to track her health status.
Subjects need appropriate UIs depending on Item formats and
technological prowess of the Subject -- kiosk "one-question-at-a-time"
formats, for example. May or may not get immediate feedback about data
submitted.
Subjects could be students, consumers, or patients.
Data Entry Staff
Has permissions to create, edit and delete data for or about the
"real" Subject. Needs UIs to speed the actions of this trained
individual and support "save and resume" operations. Data entry
procedures used by Staff must capture the identity if both the "real"
subject and the Staff person entering the data -- for audit trails and
other data security and authentication functions. Data entry staff need
robust data validation and integrity checks with optional, immediate
data verification steps and electronic signatures at final submission.
(Many of the tight-sphinctered requirements for FDA submissions center
around mechanisms encountered here: to prove exactly who created any
datum, when, whether it is a correct value, whether anyone has looked
at it or edited it and when, etc etc...)
Staff could be site coordinators in clinical trials, insurance
adjustors, accountants, tax preparation staff, etc.
System / Application Overview
Editing of Assessments
Scheduling of Assessments
- Create, edit, clone and delete Assessment Schedules. Schedulers
will define:
- Start and End Dates for an Assessment
- Number of times a Subject can perform the Assessment (1-n)
- Interval between Assessment completion if Subject can
perform it more than once
- Whether anonymous Subjects are allowed
- Text of email to Subjects to Invite, Remind and Thank them
for performing Assessment
- Text of email to Staff to Instuct, Remind and Thank them for
performing Assessment on a Subject
- Provide these additional functions:
- Support optional "electronic signatures" consisting simply
of an
additional password field on the form along with an "I attest this is
my response" checkbox that the user completes on submission (rejected
without the correct password) -- ie authentication only.
- Support optional "digital signatures" consisting of a hash
of the user's submitted data, encrypted along with the user's password
-- ie authentication + nonrepudiation.
- Perform daily scheduled procedures to look for Subjects and
Staff who need to be Invited/Instructed or Reminded to participate.
- Incorporate procedures to send Thanks notifications upon
completion of Assessment
- Provide UIs for Subjects and for Staff to show the status of
the Assessments they're scheduled to perform -- eg a table that shows
expected dates, actual completion dates, etc.
Analysis of Assessments
- Provide UIs to:
- Define time-based, sortable searches of Assessment data
(both
primary/raw data and calculated Scored data) for tabular and (if
appropriate) graphical display
- Define time-based, sortable searches of Assessment data for
conversion into configurable file formats for download
- Define specific searches for display of data quality
(incomplete assessments, audit trails of changed data values, etc)
Performance of Assessments
- Provide mechanisms to:
- Handle user Login (for non-anonymous studies)
- Determine and display correct UI for type of user (eg kiosk
format for patients; keyboard-centric UI for data entry Staff)
- Deliver Section forms to user
- Perform data validation and data integrity checks on form
submission, and return any errors flagged within form
- Display confirmation page showing submitted data (if
appropriate) along with "Edit this again" or "Yes, Save Data" buttons
- Display additional "electronic signature" field for password
and "I certify these data" checkbox if indicated for Assessment
- Process sequence navigation rules based on submitted data
and deliver next Section or terminate event as indicated
- Track elapsed time user spends on Assessment tasks --
answering a given question, a section of questions, or the entire
Assessment -- and do something with this (we're not
entirely sure yet what this should be -- merely record the elapsed time
for subsequent analysis, reject over-time submissions, or even forcibly
refresh a laggard user's page to "grab the Assessment back")
- Insert appropriate audit records for each data submission,
if indicated for Assessment
- Handle indicated email notifications at end of Assessment
(to Subject, Staff, Scheduler, or Editor)