How do we mark Group Projects at Escape Studios? For our students studying with us on courses validated by Coventry University, we have a new simplified process for the marking of group projects.
Group work, also called Studio Projects, are marked according a formula which aims to take into account the judgment of tutors and our students themselves, but also allowing for individual contributions (more on this below).
75% of the grade is awarded for the final Project, and 25% of the grade goes for the final Presentation of the project – usually a group presentation by all the members of the team (some Modules may include a retrospective or an individual Presentation).
Project Mark – 75%
The Project Mark (sometimes called the Portfolio Mark, or Tutor Mark) makes 75% of the final Module grade. This Project Mark is the same for everyone in the group, and is awarded by the tutor overseeing the project. The grade is for the project, not for each students’ contribution, so each person within the group will get the same Project Mark. But this is subject to a Group Modifier (see below).
Since not everyone in the group will have made an equal contribution to the project, the Project Mark is subjected to a Group Modifier (also known as a Team Rating). The Modifier is carried out anonymously and allows moderation of the project mark to
differentiate between the contributions of individuals within the group. Each member of the group has an allocation of marks that they can award
to the other team members in proportion to their contribution.How The Group Modifier (Team Rating) Works
For example, in a group of 6 students, each student would have 50 marks to award to the other five members. All 50 marks could be awarded to one group member, or the marks could be apportioned equally, where each member gets 10 marks, or any combination in between.See the table below by way of example, in which Alex made a big contribution to the project, and Fred a rather smaller one.
Once the modifier marks are tabulated and an average produced, the average is used to adjust each students’ final mark within the group. So, for example, see the table below.
The Modifier is applied, using this formula:
FINAL_MARK = MIN(100,GROUP_MARK*(1+(STUDENT_MARK-10)/(NUMBER OF STUDENTS * 10)))
This algorithm produces the Final Project Mark for each individual student, which makes up 75% of their overall grade for the whole Module.
Presentation – 25%
The remaining 25% is awarded for the Presentation, an oral presentation of the project, in which each student describes their personal contribution to the group project. Some Modules may require instead a written Retrospective – check with your tutor to see if this applies.
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| Don’t be a Free Rider |
Some group projects have “free riders” – group members who contribute little or nothing to a project. These students cannot expect to pass the module.
Marking at Escape Studios
To see more about how marking works at Escape Studios, follow the links below:
Teamwork at Escape Studios
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| BAFTA Shortlisted Jerich0 – Studio Project |
To see more about teamwork at Escape Studios follow the links below:
- Why We Do Group Projects at Escape Studios
- Managing Team Projects at Escape Studios
- Group Projects – Six Rules for Success
- Group Projects in Peril – When Team Work Goes Bad
- The Escape Method – How it Works
- How Feedback Works at Escape Studios
- The Rookies Ranks Escape Studios in Top 5 Globally for Teamwork
- How to Make a Short Animated Film
- Framestore Brings Teamwork to Escape Studios
- How We Select Teams for Group Projects at Escape Studios




