webassign

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This article is an orphan, as few or no other articles link to it. Please introduce links to this page from other articles related to it. (February 2009)

WebAssign is an online homework assignment service which was initially developed at North Carolina State University.[1] The company's website is http://www.webassign.net.
Some of the disciplines covered include Mathematics, Chemistry, Statistics, Physics, and Biology. Contents [hide] 1 Overview 2 Mechanics 3 Advantages 4 Criticism 5 References 6 External links //

Overview

There is no cost to the teacher or the students in order to login. After a grace period, however, the student must pay for further access. Once a teacher has set up an account, he or she may set up classes, create and schedule assignments, upload class rosters, and make class announcements. Once the student is logged in, he or she may see the announcements and complete any outstanding assignments.

Mechanics

Assignments consist of a list of questions that can be either free-response or multiple-choice, and each question is given a set number of opportunities to answer a question. Teachers can set questions to notify students whether or not their answer is correct. If the answer is correct, a green check appears. If an answer is incorrect, a red 'x' appears. Mathematical equations containing the appropriate figures are not accepted for numerical answers. WebAssign supports automatic grading of answers when appropriate, however it is frequently incorrect.[2]

WebAssign has some anti-cheating devices. Often, variables in questions will be
marked red. This indicates that this variable is not the same for all students. Thus, a set of raw answers cannot be copied directly into WebAssign, but any potential distributor of answers will need to supply a formula into which other people could plug in their own numbers.

Advantages

WebAssign uses a mostly HTML based environment which allows for ease of use and faster load times.

WebAssign provides quick responses through its Customer Support for both faculty and students via phone and e-mail. It is often possible to hear back directly from an editor on content-related issues.

Students do not have to carry their textbook around to do homework, or carry around a paper copy of their completed homework assignment. They can also print off the problems to work on them when they do not have access to a computer.

Saves professors the administrative work of creating, collecting and grading homework.

Criticism

WebAssign assignments are often very specific for significant digits and do not indicate to students if they are a digit off, leading many students to incorrectly assume that they have solved the problem incorrectly when in fact they have merely not entered enough digits into the answer. There are also various errors in the coding that cause WebAssign to expect nonsensical answers. WebAssign has some trouble when it comes to internal calculations, especially

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