CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2017/E1791. Track the time that students look at the other submissions - logging improvement: Difference between revisions
Line 91: | Line 91: | ||
== Project Links == | == Project Links == | ||
1. [https://github.com/expertiza/expertiza/pull/ | 1. [https://github.com/expertiza/expertiza/pull/1124 Project Github repo] | ||
2. [https://youtu.be/IMTBqiKth-k Project Video Demo] | 2. [https://youtu.be/IMTBqiKth-k Project Video Demo] |
Revision as of 04:23, 6 December 2017
Introduction
The expertiza project takes advantage of peer-review among students to allow them to learn from each other. To track the review time that each student spend on each submitted resources is meaningful to instructors to study and improve the teach experience. However, the time tracking of specific content on these resources is not perfect in the expertiza system. The previous team working on E1705 project has solved part of such problems by tracking the active time of windows opened from the submitted links. But for the submitted files which could be downloaded for local review, there is only a rough approximation solution yet. In this project, our team is going to solve this problem as well as improving previous time tracking methods using mature third-party APIs to record link review time more accurately. To accomplish this goal, here are the general solutions we designed and implemented in this project:
- Designed a database schema for logging the time a reviewer spend on a submission;
- Designed and implemented dynamic partial components using Javascript and Ruby to open students’ submissions in new windows to view online;
- Used DOM to control the windows holding review submission files or links, and record the open and close time;
- Modify Review report (views/review_mapping/_review_report.html.erb) to show the total and detailed time spent on each review submissions with visualization.
Problem Description and Solution
Our team is going to solve the submission review time tracking by attempting to open the downloaded files inside popup windows of the web browser in order to record the time on the client side.
Design pattern
Type of submitted files
For most of our tasks, there are two types of submitted files.
1. One kind is online links, such as github repo or pull request link, youtube video link, expertiza wiki page link, etc
2. The other one includes files such as pdf, txt, doc, images, etc and other download contents.
Database shcema design
For this project, we need to design a database table to store all the time that we need to record for each review submission. We would like to name the table as review_time. For the table, we would use map_id in table response, which uses response_map_id as the primary information. Then we need to record reviewer_id and reviewee_id, file_link for submitted files, as well as time start_at and end_at, then store them in the table.
Time tracking mechanism
For each review, when the reviewer click on one link of the submitted files, we create an entry to the table review_time, we will write a function to record current time to the database.
For how to determine time when the reviewer complete with the opened link, there are different cases. If the reviewer click on save or submit button, close the page, or logout, we need to write to all open entry (without end_at) respect to this review and save current time to end_at. But for how to decide when the review close the opened link is a little complicated. For github and youtube links and txt, pdf, doc, image files, we will open submitted files in views/response/_submitted_files.html.erb so that when the user click on the link, it opens a popup window that shows the submission, record time when it opens and closes. This is done by controlling DOM using jQuery javascript library, and then send back the time records through Ajax. For the other files that need to be downloaded, we can only make an approximation by record the time when the reviewer click on the link until the time he/she enter the reviews.
View modification
After we record start_at and end_at time for each piece of review, we need to display time that each reviewer spent for each link. Because the reviewer may save the review and start again in the future, so for each link there might be several entries, we need to sum them together. We will try to modify code in review_mapping/_review_report.html.erb first to modify the view. This framework follows well the "open to extension and close to modification" principle, which makes further changes more feasible by adding additional view components without affecting current functions.
Edge cases
1. When user click on save or submit the review without closing opened windows, the system will search all records of response time for the reviewer and reviewee where end time is NULL, and update it with current time.
2. If the reviewer opens the reference links or download files, but leave them open and turn to focus other unrelated stuff, the review page will send a popup alert dialog to confirm if the review is still in review mode. If not, it will close these windows and save the time as approximation of end time. Otherwise, it will continue the review process.
Test Plan
UI and Manual test
We will test the following cases during our development
1. When we work the review, if we click on GitHub link, GitHub pull request link, check whether the system record review time correctly.
2. When we work the review, if we click on doc, pdf, image link, check whether system open submitted files in views/response/_submitted_files.html.erb and recore the review time correctly.
3. Check if the reviewer save the process and start again with click on same clink, check whether the system will record all the entry, and on the view page take all entries for one link into account.
Rspec Test
Test of new model and function will be written and tested during project development:
- Test the success of a review time record given valid start and end time;
describe ResponseTimesController do
describe '#action_allowed?' do it "should return true" do expect(true).to be_truthy end end
- Test the error handler when a review time record fails to save;
- Test the calculation of the total review time for the same link.
Related Files
review_time.rb
responses_controller.rb
response_times_controller.rb
helper/review_mapping_helper.rb
response/response.html.erb
review_mapping/_review_report.html.erb
review_mapping/_review_submissions_time_spent.html.erb
view/popup/reviewer_details_popup.html.erb
view/submitted_content/_hyperlink.html.erb
view/submitted_content/_submitted_files.html.erb
db/migrate/20171117190721_create_response_times.rb
config/routes.rb
Future Work
In this project, we accomplished the requirement defined in the project instructions. However, due to the complexity of the Expertiza system and limited time period, there are still several points to improve in the future:
1. Improve the accuracy of review time record. To record the exact time that the user spends on each link or file, it is more accurate to track the active time of each new window or tab of these links or online files. We attempted this design using 'window.focus()', but it does not work once the user moved away from the review page and turned to other applications. So either tweaking the web setting or using browser APIs may solve this problem.
2. Notify the user when no response on the review page. Occasionally the user may open the review page to do the review, but is interrupted to focus on other applications. In this case, we stopped the time recording but try to alert the user that if he wants to continue the review. However, this notice cannot show in time if the user is not focusing on that review page. So a global alert is necessary to save the time and provide notice on time.
Project Links
Team
Shijie Li
Wei Sun
Aishwarya Sundararajan
Darshan Balakrishna Bhandari