Designing For Engagement: A Comparison Of Canvas And A Visual Peer Review Dashboard
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Designing For Engagement: A Comparison Of Canvas And A Visual Peer Review Dashboard |
Abstract
Peer review is an underutilized yet potentially powerful strategy for fostering evaluative judgment and design literacy in visualization education. Critiquing visual work requires domain-specific competencies that extend beyond generic peer feedback; however, widely adopted platforms such as Canvas provide limited support for the cognitive and visual demands of visualization critique. We introduce VisPeerReview, a visualization-specific learning analytics dashboard (LAD) designed to scaffold peer feedback through an integrated visualization display, rubric-guided prompts, and inline annotation tools. We evaluated VisPeerReview through a three-phase mixed-methods study conducted in an undergraduate data visualization course, comparing it with Canvas’s default peer-review workflow. Drawing on interaction logs, peer-review text, and survey responses, we found that VisPeerReview elicited significantly longer and more linguistically rich feedback and was consistently preferred by students. Sentiment analysis further indicated more positive evaluative language and clearer reviewer intent under the dashboard-supported condition. Beyond tool evaluation, this study offers the first systematic comparison between Canvas and a visualization-specific LAD, demonstrating how theory-aligned instructional interface design—grounded in representational competence and learningsciences frameworks—can meaningfully improve the quality of peer feedback in computing education.
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Alon Friedman, Ly Dinh, Md Dilshadur Rahman, and Paul Rosen. Designing For Engagement: A Comparison Of Canvas And A Visual Peer Review Dashboard. ACM Transactions on Computing Education, 2026.
Bibtex
@article{friedman2026designing,
title = {Designing for Engagement: A Comparison of Canvas and a Visual Peer Review
Dashboard},
author = {Friedman, Alon and Dinh, Ly and Rahman, Md Dilshadur and Rosen, Paul},
journal = {ACM Transactions on Computing Education},
year = {2026},
abstract = {Peer review is an underutilized yet potentially powerful strategy for
fostering evaluative judgment and design literacy in visualization education. Critiquing
visual work requires domain-specific competencies that extend beyond generic peer
feedback; however, widely adopted platforms such as Canvas provide limited support for
the cognitive and visual demands of visualization critique. We introduce VisPeerReview,
a visualization-specific learning analytics dashboard (LAD) designed to scaffold peer
feedback through an integrated visualization display, rubric-guided prompts, and inline
annotation tools. We evaluated VisPeerReview through a three-phase mixed-methods study
conducted in an undergraduate data visualization course, comparing it with Canvas’s
default peer-review workflow. Drawing on interaction logs, peer-review text, and survey
responses, we found that VisPeerReview elicited significantly longer and more
linguistically rich feedback and was consistently preferred by students. Sentiment
analysis further indicated more positive evaluative language and clearer reviewer intent
under the dashboard-supported condition. Beyond tool evaluation, this study offers the
first systematic comparison between Canvas and a visualization-specific LAD,
demonstrating how theory-aligned instructional interface design—grounded in
representational competence and learningsciences frameworks—can meaningfully improve the
quality of peer feedback in computing education.}
}