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Hauptverfasser: Cui, Yuan, Goldman, Annabel, Zhou, Jovy, Liu, Xiaolin, Shieh, Clarissa, Yao, Joshua, Cheng, Mia, Kay, Matthew, Yang, Fumeng
Format: Preprint
Veröffentlicht: 2026
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.22186
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author Cui, Yuan
Goldman, Annabel
Zhou, Jovy
Liu, Xiaolin
Shieh, Clarissa
Yao, Joshua
Cheng, Mia
Kay, Matthew
Yang, Fumeng
author_facet Cui, Yuan
Goldman, Annabel
Zhou, Jovy
Liu, Xiaolin
Shieh, Clarissa
Yao, Joshua
Cheng, Mia
Kay, Matthew
Yang, Fumeng
contents Assessments are critical in education, but creating them can be difficult. To address this challenge in a grounded way, we partnered with 13 teachers in a seven-month codesign process. We developed a conceptual model that characterizes the iterative dual process where teachers develop assessments while simultaneously refining requirements. To enact this model in practice, we built Ripplet, a web-based tool with multilevel reusable interactions to support assessment authoring. The extended codesign revealed that Ripplet enabled teachers to create formative assessments they would not have otherwise made, shifted their practices from generation to curation, and helped them reflect more on assessment quality. In a user study with 15 additional teachers, compared to their current practices, teachers felt the results were more worth their effort and that assessment quality improved.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_22186
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Codesigning Ripplet: an LLM-Assisted Assessment Authoring System Grounded in a Conceptual Model of Teachers' Workflows
Cui, Yuan
Goldman, Annabel
Zhou, Jovy
Liu, Xiaolin
Shieh, Clarissa
Yao, Joshua
Cheng, Mia
Kay, Matthew
Yang, Fumeng
Human-Computer Interaction
Assessments are critical in education, but creating them can be difficult. To address this challenge in a grounded way, we partnered with 13 teachers in a seven-month codesign process. We developed a conceptual model that characterizes the iterative dual process where teachers develop assessments while simultaneously refining requirements. To enact this model in practice, we built Ripplet, a web-based tool with multilevel reusable interactions to support assessment authoring. The extended codesign revealed that Ripplet enabled teachers to create formative assessments they would not have otherwise made, shifted their practices from generation to curation, and helped them reflect more on assessment quality. In a user study with 15 additional teachers, compared to their current practices, teachers felt the results were more worth their effort and that assessment quality improved.
title Codesigning Ripplet: an LLM-Assisted Assessment Authoring System Grounded in a Conceptual Model of Teachers' Workflows
topic Human-Computer Interaction
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.22186