Difference between revisions of "Assistance Dilemma English Articles"

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[[Image:Picture 1.jpg|thumb|left|500px|Answer Only: Using this tutor, students select an article (a, an, the, no article) from the box to complete each sentence.]]
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[[Image:Picture 7.jpg|thumb|left|500px|Answer Selection + Menu Self-Explanation:  Using this tutor, students select an article (a, an, the, no article) from the box to complete each sentence and select the feature of the sentence that explains the article choice.]]
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[[Image:Picture 2.jpg|thumb|left|500px|Answer Selection + Free-form Self-Explanation:  Using this tutor, students select an article (a, an, the, no article) from the box to complete each sentence and write and explanation for why they chose that response.]]
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==== Dependent Variables ====
  

Revision as of 01:50, 8 October 2008

PI Ruth Wylie, Teruko Mitamura, Ken Koedinger
Others with > 160 hours Jim Rankin
Start date study 1 September 2008
End date study 1 December 2008
Start date study 2 January 2008
End date study 2 May 2008
Learnlab English


Intelligent Writing Tutor

Ruth Wylie, Teruko Mitamura, Ken Koedinger, and Jim Rankin

Abstract

This project focuses on integrated theory development with respect to the Assistance Dilemma (Koedinger and Aleven, 2007). A key goal is to have a theory that is sufficient to make a priori predictions about what instructional treatments yield the most robust learning.

The project focuses on exploring general principles of learning along three different dimensions of assistance: 1) task type: a) edit vs. b) selection; 2) spacing: a) more spacing vs. b) less spacing, and 3) self-explanation: a) problems only vs. b) problems with prompts to self-explain. We instantiate these principles within the domain of the English article system and within the English as a Second Language LearnLab. In this domain, standard practice often uses the (a) values on the three dimensions above (edit of multiple knowledge components with no self-explanation) whereas emerging PSLC theory and analysis predict that the (b) values on the three dimensions (selection on a subset of knowledge components with self-explanation) will lead to greater robust learning outcomes. These dimensions are interesting for exploring a priori predictions as to whether adding difficulties (removing assistance) during instruction aids or harms eventual learning outcomes. For the task type and spacing dimensions, our standing theoretical prediction is that the added demand editing and greater spacing (dimensions 1a and 2a) hurt learning, while the added demand of self-explanation (dimension 3b) helps learning.

Glossary

Background

Study 1: Self-Explanation Study

Research Questions

Hypothesis

Since the added process of self-explanation is generative, students in the self-explanation with menu condition will show greater learning gains on both normal and robust learning measures than those in the no self-explanation condition and free-form self-explanation condition. We hypothesize that the added difficulty of generating explanations in the free-form condition is extraneous and thus will result in less learning than the menu-based self-explanation conditions.

In addition, while self-explanation has proved to lead to greater learning in other domains, this would be the one of the first, if not the first, study to empirically examine its effects in second language grammar acquisition.

Independent Variables

Answer Only: Using this tutor, students select an article (a, an, the, no article) from the box to complete each sentence.


Answer Selection + Menu Self-Explanation: Using this tutor, students select an article (a, an, the, no article) from the box to complete each sentence and select the feature of the sentence that explains the article choice.
Answer Selection + Free-form Self-Explanation: Using this tutor, students select an article (a, an, the, no article) from the box to complete each sentence and write and explanation for why they chose that response.

Dependent Variables

Study 2: Self-Explanation Study

Research Questions

Hypothesis

Students who complete sentence-length exercises will show greater robust learning than students who complete paragraph-length exercises. Furthermore, students who use the focused generation (menu) interface will show greater robust learning than students who use the free edit interface.

Independent Variables

Dependent Variables

Papers and Presentations

References