Difference between revisions of "Talk:Ringenberg Examples-as-Help"

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m (Interactive Communication Cluster: Wiki Page Reviews and Discussion)
(Interactive Communication Cluster: Wiki Page Reviews and Discussion)
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Your results look very interesting! Makes me excited to read the rest of the study's wiki page!
 
Your results look very interesting! Makes me excited to read the rest of the study's wiki page!
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<i>Background and Significance</i>: Don't forget to add the citations indicated. More importantly, some conceptual information could make this section more clear. First, "help abuse" in this context seems to refer to the progression through a full hint sequence and, as you indicate, could be problematic or could be a useful strategy. Thus, it seems that the critical question is whether students are using the full example sequence as a shallow learning strategy or as a worked-example? I assume that this distinction is what you are testing with the current manipulation. However, it would be useful to make this approach explicit. I would start by describing the problem without the loaded terminology, then making the distinction between the two possibilities. (e.g., ...students often view entire hint sequences before returning to a problem step. This approach could consitute help abuse, or it could indicate that students are using hints as worked examples. In this study...)
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A related question is whether you will split the standard hint condition by behavioral data (those who show potential "hint abuse" and those who don't). Seems that the relevant comparison is between the hint abusers (only) and the worked examples group?
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<i>Independent Variables</i>: Looks good, but just one request for clarification here. The example being given in the "completely justified hint" is the exact problem being completed? It's not an isomorphic example to the problem, correct?

Revision as of 00:03, 6 March 2007

Interactive Communication Cluster: Wiki Page Reviews and Discussion

Date:March 5, 2007
Reviewer: Kirsten Butcher
Review:In progress
Abstract: The abstract is succinct and clear, but there are a couple things that may help the reader understand the manipulation and its important.

First, it is easy to trip up on the term "completely justified example" (I wonder why you choose this term instead of the "annotated, worked examples" that appears in your paper title?) So, it was very helpful that you included a glossary entry for the term. But I still have some confusion. To what does "completely" refer to? Is it the number of steps shown, the inclusion of the explanation, or both? The explanations/rationale for the steps don't seem very complete (especially compared to the expanded text that one finds in standard hint sequences). So I assume the hints are "completely justified" in the sense that they give you all the steps for the problem (and add a bit of context by supplying a description). But it may help drive the point home to add a contrasting example to the glossary entry -- that is, to add a description of how the completely justified hints differ from standard hint sequences in the glossary entry. Also, adding a very brief description of each condition to the abstract text would help the reader understand the relevant comparisons more easily (as is, the reader must first follow glossary links to develop an understanding of each condition separately, then must infer the relevant contrasts).

Second, the abstract doesn't explain the theoretical rational for why these conditions were chosen/tested nor why differences might be expected. It would strengthen the impact of the study to include a brief description of these theoretical issues in the abstract, with perhaps a connection one or more of the Interactive Communication Cluster's main research questions.

Your results look very interesting! Makes me excited to read the rest of the study's wiki page!

Background and Significance: Don't forget to add the citations indicated. More importantly, some conceptual information could make this section more clear. First, "help abuse" in this context seems to refer to the progression through a full hint sequence and, as you indicate, could be problematic or could be a useful strategy. Thus, it seems that the critical question is whether students are using the full example sequence as a shallow learning strategy or as a worked-example? I assume that this distinction is what you are testing with the current manipulation. However, it would be useful to make this approach explicit. I would start by describing the problem without the loaded terminology, then making the distinction between the two possibilities. (e.g., ...students often view entire hint sequences before returning to a problem step. This approach could consitute help abuse, or it could indicate that students are using hints as worked examples. In this study...)

A related question is whether you will split the standard hint condition by behavioral data (those who show potential "hint abuse" and those who don't). Seems that the relevant comparison is between the hint abusers (only) and the worked examples group?

Independent Variables: Looks good, but just one request for clarification here. The example being given in the "completely justified hint" is the exact problem being completed? It's not an isomorphic example to the problem, correct?