The Test of Creative Thinking (TCT-DP) has long been the gold standard for assessing creativity in students, but it's expensive, slow, and labor-intensive, and it's out of reach for most schools.
Now, researchers at the University of South Australia in Australia have developed an algorithm that marks a test in a single millisecond, as opposed to the standard 15-minute human-marked test, and can score assessments in a fraction of the time and a fraction of the cost.
"What would have cost around $22,500 and taken 12 person-weeks [450 hours] to score ended up taking around 12 hours and costing only $600," lead researcher David Cropley tells the Educator.
"Without the algorithm, these activities simply wouldn't be practical," he adds.
The researchers used the algorithm to analyze data collected from a high school in Adelaide as part of another project.
One of the reasons a co-researcher collected the data was in anticipation of having the algorithm available, Cropley says: "What would have cost her $22,500 and taken 12 person-weeks [450 hours] to score ended up taking around 12 hours and costing only $600."
The team is currently developing a stand-alone desktop version that teachers can install on their
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Caroline Diehl is a serial social entrepreneur in the impact media space. She is Executive Chair and Founder of the UK’s only charitable and co-operatively owned national broadcast television channel Together TV, the leading broadcaster for social change runs a national TV channel in the UK and digital platform which helps people find inspiration to do good in their lives and communities.