How Much Learning Support Should be Provided to Novices and Advanced Students?

Learning from examples, either alone or combined with problem solving has been proven to be beneficial for learning in Intelligent Tutoring System. However, it is generally unknown how much example-based assistance should be provided. We previously found that erroneous examples prepared students better for problem solving in comparison to worked examples when the order of learning activities is fixed [2]. However, students do not necessarily need all learning activities. We introduced a novel strategy which adaptively decides which learning activity (a worked example, an incorrect example, a problem, or none at all) is appropriate for a student based on his/her performance in SQL-Tutor. In this paper, we investigate the effect of the adaptive strategy on students with different levels of prior knowledge. We found both novices and advanced students who received learning activities adaptively achieved the same learning outcomes as their peers in a fixed condition, but with fewer learning activities. Surprisingly, there was no significant difference on the number of learning activities between novices and advanced students.

[1]  T. Gog,et al.  Effects of worked examples, example-problem, and problem-example pairs on novices learning , 2011 .

[2]  Slava Kalyuga,et al.  Rapid dynamic assessment of expertise to improve the efficiency of adaptive e-learning , 2005 .

[3]  Jörg Wittwer,et al.  Can tutored problem solving benefit from faded worked-out examples? , 2007 .

[4]  Moffat Mathews,et al.  Do Erroneous Examples Improve Learning in Addition to Problem Solving and Worked Examples? , 2016, ITS.

[5]  Stellan Ohlsson,et al.  Constraint-Based Student Modeling , 1994 .

[6]  Tamara van Gog Effects of identical example-problem and problem-example pairs on learning , 2011, Comput. Educ..

[7]  S. Derry,et al.  Learning from Examples: Instructional Principles from the Worked Examples Research , 2000 .

[8]  Fred G. W. C. Paas,et al.  The Efficiency of Instructional Conditions: An Approach to Combine Mental Effort and Performance Measures , 1992 .

[9]  Alexander Renkl,et al.  Finding and fixing errors in worked examples: Can this foster learning outcomes? ☆ , 2007 .

[10]  Bruce M. McLaren,et al.  When Is It Best to Learn with All Worked Examples? , 2011, AIED.

[11]  Erica Melis,et al.  Erroneous examples: effects on learning fractions in a web-based setting , 2012 .

[12]  B. Rittle-Johnson,et al.  The effectiveness of using incorrect examples to support learning about decimal magnitude. , 2012 .

[13]  A. Mitrovic,et al.  EXAMPLES AND TUTORED PROBLEMS: IS ALTERNATING EXAMPLES AND PROBLEMS THE BEST INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGY? , 2014 .

[14]  Slava Kalyuga,et al.  When problem solving is superior to studying worked examples. , 2001 .

[15]  Richard E. Clark,et al.  Why Minimal Guidance During Instruction Does Not Work: An Analysis of the Failure of Constructivist, Discovery, Problem-Based, Experiential, and Inquiry-Based Teaching , 2006 .

[16]  Antonija Mitrovic,et al.  An Intelligent SQL Tutor on the Web , 2003, Int. J. Artif. Intell. Educ..

[17]  Vincent Aleven,et al.  The worked-example effect: Not an artefact of lousy control conditions , 2009, Comput. Hum. Behav..