Title: StoryStation
1StoryStation
- Peter Wiemer-Hastings Judy RobertsonKath
Glasswell - DePaul University University of
EdinburghUniversity of Illinois at Chicago
2Motivation
- Learning to write (well) is hard
- Multiple constraints / voices (Flower, 1994)
- Reader What do I want R to know? What do I know
about what R knows? What do I want from R? - Situation What am I supposed to write about?
What do I know about my topic? What do I want to
say about it? - Socio-linguistic context How can I say this in a
way that my teacher will accept?
3Metacognitive Double Whammy
- Students must learn how to think about meeting
the demands of multiple, possibly conflicting
constraints. - Students ordinarily dont know what those
constraints are.
4AI to the rescue!?
- Appropriate feedback on compositions can point
students in the right direction. - Teachers dont have time to give the best
feedback to every student all the time. - NLP techniques can analyze compositions, generate
feedback. - Associating different types of feedback with
different animated agents might help the students
learn the various constraints.
5Research goals
- To investigate the effect of animated pedagogical
agents on 10-11 year old pupils - motivation,
- satisfaction,
- learning (eventually).
- To develop an intelligent tutoring system to help
children write stories
6Agenda
- Previous work
- Design process
- StoryStation features
- Evaluation preliminary results
- Future directions
7Previous research on agents
- Mayer and Wittrock, 1996
- With agents, students have more social and
emotional investment, more motivated, try harder,
problem solve better. - Herman the Bug (Lester et. al, 1997)
- Students more motivated when using agents, and
learn more. - Johnson, Rickel, and Lester, 2000
- increased communication bandwidth and social
interaction with agents - Review of agent research (Dehn and van Mulken,
2000) - Some serious methodological problems. No control
in Lester et al. - Moreno, Mayer, and Lester, 2001
- Included control. Agents are social actors,
increase motivation, learning, transfer. Voice
is important, face not.
8Previous writing research
- Previous writing environments were designed to
support cognitive processes of writing (e.g.
Sharples 1988), based on Flower and Hayes (1980)
theory. - Writing apprehension (Madigan, Linton and
Johnson, 1996) - More recently, interest in providing emotional
support for writers (e.g. Triffic Tales project) - StoryStation basic strategy Provide positive
feedback to encourage pupils to take
responsibility for their own learning
9Design process
- Requirements gathering with 2 teachers and 37
pupils - Integration of National English Language
Curriculum goals - Design team of 8 pupils and 2 teachers, working
on the project regularly for 18 months - Observation of classroom practice
- 3 pilot studies
10StoryStation features
- Spelling
- Word banks
- Dictionary
- Thesaurus
- Vocabulary
- Characterization
- Plot (in progress)
11Story re-telling Task
- Students hear a story-teller present a story (or
a video) - Students are asked to create their own version
with StoryStation. - Scaffolds students writing.
- Facilitates text analysis.
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17Evaluation 18 teachers
- Positive feedback is a good feature, contrasts
with programs which simply point out mistakes. - Useful for independent learning because it
teaches pupils how to self correct. - Good for pupils to get instant feedback rather
than waiting till the next day. - Would like StoryStation to help them in assessing
pupils progress - Generally, teachers are surprisingly trusting of
technology
18Evaluation - pupils
- 60 pupils (10 12 year olds)
- Half used agents version, half text-only
- Pupils
- Listened to 10 minute recording of The Screaming
Skulls of Calgarth - Watched demo of StoryStation
- Wrote their own version of Screaming Skulls
using StoryStation (40 minutes to 75 minutes,
depending on timetabling constraints) - Filled in questionnaire
- Answered structured interview questions
19Childrens comments on StoryStation
- Id probably buy it for my home computer
- Roseanna, age 12
- If I had StoryStation on my computer Id
definitely use it more than Microsoft Word - Rosemary age 12
- Its really good and it helps you to write
better - Shenel, age 12
- It makes writing fun. You enjoy it more when
youve got the helpers there - Joanna, age 11
20Questionnaire results
6. StoryStation makes writing stories easier 7. I
think I need someone to help me use
StoryStation 8. I think the StoryStation advice
was useful 9. A teacher is more helpful than
StoryStation 10. StoryStation is boring
1. I enjoyed using StoryStation2. I think
StoryStation made my writing worse 3. I think I
would like to use StoryStation again 4. Using
StoryStation help me to write better 5. I found
StoryStation confusing
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22Nice pictures
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26Some issues
- Childrens thoughts about agents
- Mixed ideas about whether agents are real.
- Childrens comparisons of teachers to
StoryStation - A teacher can tell from your eyes what youre
thinking, but StoryStation cant Saima, age 11 - Social relationships The teacher can shout at
you, but you can shout at StoryStation - Knowledge Take StoryStations advice more
because it is a computer
27Current Proposal
- NSF-ROLE grant proposal with Elliott and
Glasswell - Clean up the metacognitive hypotheses and
evaluations - Address some of the questions about agents.
28Conclusions
- Children think StoryStation is useful for writing
stories - StoryStation is motivating to children
- Agent users more likely to find StoryStation
advice helpful, and want to use it again - Agent users less likely to find StoryStation
confusing - Interesting social / gender interactions
29Challenges
- How to foster metacognition
- Appropriate feedback depends on genre, context,
audience, etc - Dialog about student choices?
- How to measure learning
- How/where to get funding to continue
30Questions or Comments?