1 / 27

Technologies that Enhance Learning

Technologies that Enhance Learning. W. Lewis Johnson Center for Advanced Research in Technology for Education (CARTE) Univ. of So. Calif. / Info. Sci. Inst. http://www.isi.edu/isd/carte johnson@isi.edu. Purpose of CARTE.

ellery
Download Presentation

Technologies that Enhance Learning

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Technologies that Enhance Learning W. Lewis Johnson Center for Advanced Research in Technology for Education (CARTE) Univ. of So. Calif. / Info. Sci. Inst. http://www.isi.edu/isd/carte johnson@isi.edu

  2. Purpose of CARTE • CARTE is: the Center for Advanced Research in Technology for Education at USC / ISI • CARTE is a leader in: • Developing new technologies • Applying them in real learning environments • Our goal: instruction that is • More responsive to student needs • More interactive and collaborative • Motivating and engaging

  3. The Next Wave: On-Line Education • Colleges are increasingly delivering instruction on line • Learning materials (lectures, notes) accessed via the Web • Homework submitted via email or on-line quizzes • On-line discussions instead of classroom discussions • Course data managed by course management systems (e.g., Blackboard, Mallard)

  4. Shortcomings of On-Line Instruction • Most on-line courses do not differ significantly from conventional courses • Guidance and feedback are limited • Scoring of right & wrong answers • Email places new burdens on instructor • Limited ability to fit the needs and interests of individual learners

  5. Example: Introductory Chemistry at USC • Department of Chemistry has incorporated technology extensively into curriculum • Online grades, and exam keys • 3D chemical models, animations • Interactive tutorials, web quizzes • Simulations • Still, they identified unmet needs: • Tutorials that adapt to learner responses • Exercises that focus on learning and applying chemical principles

  6. Objectives of Our Research • On-line multimedia that significantly improves (on) classroom instruction • Lessons that keep learners highly motivated • Interactive problem solving experiences, with guidance and feedback • Software that helps learners meet individual learning goals

  7. What the Student Sees Now (on demand web cast) PDF or PowerPoint Microsoft Media Player

  8. USC DEN – Webcasting (updates) Source encoding High resolution image sync. direct from multiple sources) (computer, video, document camera) Live chat, polling, etc.

  9. DEN Technology In The Future • More use of on-line lecture notes and exercises, less talking head video • Improve learning experience for remote AND on-campus students • More support for interactive, collaborative exercises • Greater use of innovative technologies, e.g., guidebots

  10. Guidebots • Animated characters that: • Interact with students in learning envs. • Model skills being taught • Help keep learning on track • Act as guides, tutors, teammates • Engage in instructional dialog • Enhance motivation and interest

  11. Guidebot-Assisted Learning Projects at CARTE • Virtual reality training environments • Application: military training • Interactive multimedia dramas • Application: health communications • On-line guided problem solving • Applications: medicine, dentistry, chemistry, engineering

  12. Roles of Guidebot • To provide voiceover commentary • To ask and answer questions • To offer advice and guidance • To assess learner knowledge • To intervene motivationally

  13. Lessons from Educational Psychology • Course should support active learning • Guidebots support individual initiative and sense-making activities • Course should obey principles ofmultimedia learning • Guidebots are designed to obey these principles • Course should enhance learnermotivation • Guidebots enhance both cognitive and motivational aspects of learning

  14. Lessons from Expert Tutors • Expert tutors attend to both motivational and cognitive factors (Lepper et al., 1993) • Inspiring learner curiosity and interest • Challenging learners to test their limits • Offering help and reassurance when they encounter difficulties • Our goal is to impart these characteristics into educational software

  15. Adele (Shaw, Johnson, Ganeshan) • Designed for use with Web-based courseware • Application: case-based health science courseware • Monitors students solving cases • Gives advice, hints, feedback • Explains rationales for actions • Intervenes if the student makes serious mistakes • Evaluates student performance • Records student performance for later review

  16. Applications of Adele • Emergency trauma care • Collaborator: Beverly Wood, MD • Clinical problem solving in medicine • Collaborators: Allan Abbott, MD, Beverly Wood, MD • Clinical problem solving in dentistry • Collaborators: Roseann Mulligan, DDS, School of Gerontology

  17. Examples

  18. Components of Diagnostic Tutoring • Probablilistic reasoner • To evaluate hypotheses and actions • Diagnostic strategy tracking • Student model • To select content for interventions • Tutorial strategy

  19. Student Model • Current implementation tracks student’s understanding of causal relations between physiology and disease • Reflects instructional objectives for undergraduate medical instruction • Overlay model updated • When tutor informs the learner of relationship • When student confirms knowledge of relationship

  20. Diagnostic Focus of Attention = instructional objective Smoking Recurrent viral infections Current focus of attention Chronic bronchitis Chronic bronchial inflammation Chronic air passage obstruction Cough

  21. Mission Rehearsal Exercise (ICT)

  22. An Evaluation of Adele • HBR version tested in focus group test with medical students • Students worked in dyads • Findings: • Students liked the way Adele uses hints to lead them in the right direction • Students tended to ask for hints only when Adele prevented students from proceeding (at diagnosis) • Students liked Adele’s questions about motivation, and spent significant time discussing them

  23. Relevant Principles of Multimedia Learning • Guidebots work in part because they adhere to the principles of multimedia learning: • Multimedia Principle • Temporal Contiguity Principle • Coherence Principle • Modality Principle • Individual Differences Principle

  24. Other Relevant Psychological Factors • Motivational factors: • Control • Curiosity • Challenge • Confidence • Cognitive factors: • Goal orientation • Inquiry and self-explanation • Meta-cognition • Learning through problem solving

  25. Problem 1 • Describe an instructional technology method that supports collaborative learning. Address the following questions: • How does collaboration promote learning? • Under what conditions is it most effective in promoting learning? • What makes your particular method effective, and why?

  26. Problem 2 • Describe an instructional technology method that supports problem solving. Address the following questions: • How does problem solving promote learning? • Under what conditions is it most effective in promoting learning? • What makes your particular method effective, and why?

  27. Problem 3 • Describe an instructional technology method that employs multimedia. Address the following questions: • How does multimedia promote learning? • Under what conditions is it most effective in promoting learning? • What makes your particular method effective, and why?

More Related