Difference between revisions of "Course Grade and GPA Prediction"

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*Multiple cooperative classifier model (MCCM) model was the best at reducing bias, or discrimination against African-American students, while other models (particularly Logistic Regression and Rawlsian Fairness) performed far worse
*Multiple cooperative classifier model (MCCM) model was the best at reducing bias, or discrimination against African-American students, while other models (particularly Logistic Regression and Rawlsian Fairness) performed far worse
*The level of bias was inconsistent across courses, with MCCM prediction showing the least bias for Psychology and the greatest bias for Computer Science
*The level of bias was inconsistent across courses, with MCCM prediction showing the least bias for Psychology and the greatest bias for Computer Science
*Multiple cooperative classifier model (MCCM) model was the best at reducing bias, or discrimination against male students, performing particularly better for Psychology course.
*Other models (Logistic Regression and Rawlsian Fairness) performed far worse for male students, performing particularly worse in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering.
Lee and Kizilcec (2020) [[https://arxiv.org/pdf/2007.00088.pdf pdf]]
Lee and Kizilcec (2020) [[https://arxiv.org/pdf/2007.00088.pdf pdf]]
* Model predicting college course grade of median or above
* Model predicting college course grade of median or above

Revision as of 18:36, 22 March 2022

Hu and Rangwala (2020) pdf

  • Models predicting if a college student will fail in a course
  • Multiple cooperative classifier model (MCCM) model was the best at reducing bias, or discrimination against African-American students, while other models (particularly Logistic Regression and Rawlsian Fairness) performed far worse
  • The level of bias was inconsistent across courses, with MCCM prediction showing the least bias for Psychology and the greatest bias for Computer Science
  • Multiple cooperative classifier model (MCCM) model was the best at reducing bias, or discrimination against male students, performing particularly better for Psychology course.
  • Other models (Logistic Regression and Rawlsian Fairness) performed far worse for male students, performing particularly worse in Computer Science and Electrical Engineering.

Lee and Kizilcec (2020) [pdf]

  • Model predicting college course grade of median or above
  • Out-of-the-box random forest model violates demographic parity and equality of opportunity for URM (underrepresented minority: American Indian, Black, Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, Hispanic, and Multicultural) than for non-URM students (White and Asian)

Yu et al. (2020) [pdf]

  • Models predicting undergraduate course grades and average GPA
  • Students who are international, first-generation, or from low-income households were inaccurately predicted to get lower course grade and average GPA than their peers
  • Fairness of models improved with the inclusion of clickstream and survey data

Riazy et al. (2020) [pdf]

  • Models predicting course outcome of students in a virtual learning environment (VLE)
  • Students with self-declared disability were predicted to pass the course with 16-23 percentage points in favor from the training and test set