Team Contribution Workspace
Log hours, track tasks, and see who is carrying the weight. Everything saves in your browser.
Add at least two members to begin.
Task Log
| Task | Assigned to | Est. hours | Actual hours | Done |
|---|
No tasks yet. Add one to start tracking.
Contribution Share
Fairness Score
Why This Exists
Group projects are common in school and work, but grading or rewarding people fairly is hard when effort is invisible. CollabCredit makes contribution data visible and shareable. It was built after watching too many students get the same grade for very different levels of work.
Last updated: March 2026. This is a browser-only tool — no data leaves your device.
Common Mistakes
- Forgetting to log small tasks. Even 15-minute check-ins add up. Log them.
- Treating all hours as equal. Two hours of deep research is not the same as two hours of formatting. Note task type in the task name.
- Waiting until the end. Track weekly. Early imbalance is easier to fix than last-week panic.
- Using the fairness score as a weapon. It is a conversation starter, not a final judgment.
Scenario Walkthrough
History 101 Group Paper: Four students. Tasks include research (10h), drafting (8h), editing (4h), and formatting (2h). Alex logs 12 hours on research and drafting. Jamie logs 6 on editing and formatting. Sam logs 4 on research. Taylor logs 2 on formatting. The fairness score drops to 17 — a clear signal to redistribute work before the deadline.
Assumptions & Limitations
Hours are self-reported. The tracker cannot verify accuracy. Task complexity is not weighted — a task called "write introduction" may be harder than "compile bibliography." Use descriptive task names to add context. The fairness score uses a simple ratio; it does not account for agreed-upon unequal splits (e.g., one person doing 60% by design).