Title: Towards Individualized Instruction With TechnologyEnabled Tools and Methods
1Towards Individualized Instruction With
Technology-Enabled Tools and Methods
Gregory K. W. K. Chung, Girlie C. Delacruz, Gary
B. Dionne, Eva L. Baker, John Lee, Ellen Osmundson
American Educational Research AssociationAnnual
Meeting Chicago, IL - April 9-13, 2007 Symposium
Rebooting the past Leveraging advances in
assessment, instruction, and technology to
individualize instruction and learning
2Structure of Talk
- Problem
- Pre-algebra/Algebra
- Classroom constraints
- Research
- Domain analysis, assessment design, instructional
design, screen shots - Results
- Did it work?
3Problem
4Study Context
- Why pre-algebra?
- Pre-algebra provides students with the
fundamental skills and knowledge that underlie
algebra - Pre-algebra ? Algebra ? STEM
- 2001-02 LAUSD 9th grade cohort
- Only 65 of 9th graders (28,000) progress to
10th grade (23 retained in 9th grade 10,000
12 leave district) - Algebra identified as gatekeeper
- In fall 2006, 38 of CSU first-time freshmen
needed remediation in mathematics (17,300) - CSU 5-year graduation rate (STEM) 34
56th/7th Grade Standards
6Research
7Research Questions
- To what extent can students learn from
instructional parcelsbrief slices of
instruction and practice? - To what extent can automated reasoning (i.e.,
Bayesian networks) be used for automated
diagnosis of pre-algebra knowledge gaps? - What is the architecture for a diagnosis and
remediation system?
8General Idea
Automated Reasoning(Bayes net)
Pre-algebra pretest
multiplicative identity
adding fractions
distributiveproperty
Individualized instruction and practice
Individualized posttest
9Research Study Overview
- Domain analysis and assessment design
- Identify the key concepts that underlie
pre-algebra and the relations among those
concepts - Instruction and practice
- Design based on best-of-breed (worked examples,
schema-based instruction, multimedia learning,
effective feedback)
10Domain Analysis
11Domain Analysis
12Domain Analysis
13Sample Assessment Items
DP distributive propertyCP-ADD commutative
property of additionAP-ADD associative
property of addition
CE common errorOPER operation
14Instructional Design
15Design Assumptions
- To maximize the chance of learning with only
brief exposure to content, instruction should - Direct the learners attention to important
content - Highlight and explain the importance of the
content - Use lay language and 1st/2nd person voice
- Use worked examples with visual annotations,
coordinated and complementary narration - Provide varied examples with different surface
features but same underlying concept - Provide practice on applying the concept
- Provide tailored and explanatory feedback
16Multiplicative Identity - 4
17Multiplicative Identity - 5
18Multiplicative Identity - 6
19Multiplicative Identity - 7
20Multiplicative Identity - 8
21Multiplicative Identity - 9
22Multiplicative Identity - 10
23Multiplicative Identity - 11
24Multiplicative Identity 12/12
25Multiple Examples
Stage 1 What is the next step in solving the
problem?
Stage 2 What is the result of carrying out the
step?
Stage 3 What is the underlying math concept?
26(No Transcript)
27Method
- 2 group pretest, posttest design
- 113 middle school students
- Instruction vs. no instruction (stratified by
concept and high, medium, low knowledge) - Procedure
- Pretest (84 items, ? .89)
- Instruction on concepts
- 4-6 concepts per student (out of 10)
- Individualized posttest
28Method
- Analysis
- Examined 6 scales (pretest ? .61 - .75)
- Adding fractions, distributive property,
transformations, multiplicative identity - Multiplying and adding fractions, rational number
equivalence - Participants dropped an analysis if
- Diagnosed as high knowledge
- Non-compliant (20-50, depending on scale)
29Results
max 8 n 9/22 p .50 d --
max 8 n 14/18 p .04 d .76
max 6 n 13/21 p .04 d .77
max 7 n 7/21 p .06 d .91
max 6 n 13/12 p .03 d .91
max 6 n 13/12 p .01 d .50
Adding fractions
Distributive property
Transfor-mations
Multiply, add fractions
Rationale number equivalence
Multiplicative identity
30Student Perceptions
- 46 reported tool the was very useful, 53
reported they were very willing to use - Tool not for everyone
- I really understood the way they took step by
step to show the problem. - I thought that the video and the practice
problems were very easy to understand, but if
they were a little more exciting it would help
make the process more fun. - No, it just made me confused. I like seeing
everything on a board, not computer.
31Closing Remarks
- Preliminary results promising
- Instruction appears effective, even if brief
- Technical aspects of individualization of
instruction and assessment tractable - DITSy Dumb Intelligent Tutoring System
- Limitations and next steps
- One instructional day between pretest and
posttest unknown retention effect low ? on some
scales novel assessment format - Refine measures, replicate, validate diagnosis,
examine more complex outcomes, examine
instructional variables
32Backup
33Content
- Ten concepts tested
- Properties (e.g., distributive property)
- Problem solving (e.g., multiplying fractions)
- Time per parcel
- Mean time (mmss) 345
- Range (mmss) 205 to 519, 1058
34Task Sequence
Instruction(worked examples, narration,visual
annotations)
Practice (stage 1)Identify thenext step
Feedback(tailored andexplanatory)
Practice (stage 2) Identify the result
Feedback(tailored and explanatory)
Practice (stage 3)Identify the math concept
Feedback(tailored and explanatory)
35Feedback is tailored to the specific option
selected.
Incorrect response feedback (a) confirmation
that the response is incorrect, and (b) a brief
explanation of why the response is wrong
Hint on what to think about to solve problem
36Correct response feedback (a) confirmation that
the response is correct, and (b) a brief
explanation of why the response is correct
37Dont know response feedback guidance on what
the student should be considering
38animation/video feedback goal, why, how, and
common errors
39Timing
40Some Observations
- Classroom / group instruction inefficient
- A lot of time spent on non-instructional
activities - Teacher telling jokes
- Students settling down (pulling out notebook from
backpack, opening textbook, getting up to sharpen
pencil) - Teacher writing the equation on the whiteboard
41Pretest-Posttest (Instruction)
max 8 n 22 p .02 d .50
max 8 n 18 p .09 d .54
max 6 n 21 p lt .001 d .61
max 7 n 21 p lt .001 d 1.36
max 6 n 11 p .14 d .37
max 6 n 12 p .10 d .43
Adding fractions
Distributive property
Transfor-mations
Multiply, add fractions
Rational number equivalence
Multiplicative identity
42Pre-algebra Bayes Net
43Diagnosis and Remediation
- Model the domain of pre-algebra with a Bayesian
network - Treats test items as evidence of understanding
- Computes the probability of a student
understanding a concept - Short slices of instruction that are focused on a
single concept - NOT intended to replace classroom teaching
- Intended to support homework, review, wrap-around
activities
44(No Transcript)
45Multiplicative Identity - 1
46Multiplicative Identity - 2
47Multiplicative Identity - 3