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AN ADAPTIVE E-LEARNING SYSTEM BASED ON USERS' LEARNING STYLES

AN ADAPTIVE E-LEARNING SYSTEM BASED ON USERS' LEARNING STYLES. Author: Phạm Quang Dũng. Outline. Introduction Learning objects and Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system

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AN ADAPTIVE E-LEARNING SYSTEM BASED ON USERS' LEARNING STYLES

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  1. AN ADAPTIVE E-LEARNING SYSTEM BASED ON USERS' LEARNING STYLES Author: Phạm Quang Dũng

  2. Outline Introduction Learning objects and Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system Automatic detection of learning styles in LMSs Conception of an adaptive e-learning system POLCA – Implementation and results Conclusion

  3. Outline Introduction Learning objects and Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system Automatic detection of learning styles in LMSs Conception of an adaptive e-learning system POLCA – Implementation and results Conclusion 3

  4. IntroductionMotivation and problem statement • Each learner has his own individual needs and characteristics • Most of LMSs do not consider learners’ needs and preferences  the need for providing learners with adaptive courses • While adaptive systems support adaptivity, they support only few functions of web-enhanced education, and the content of courses is not available for reuse. • In contrast, LMSs focus on supporting teachers and help to make online teaching as easy as possible.  use an adaptive learning management system

  5. IntroductionResearch issues 1. How can learning styles be identified? • Find a literature-based method for automatic identifying learners’ learning styles • based on their behaviour and actions on learning objects in online courses using LMSs • suitable for LMSs in general 2.How can adaptive courses be provided in LMSs? • which types of learning objects • their order

  6. Outline Introduction Learning objects and Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system Automatic detection of learning styles in LMSs Conception of an adaptive e-learning system POLCA – Implementation and results Conclusion 6

  7. Learning object? • any digital resource that can be reused to support learning (D.A. Wiley, 2000) • digital images or photos, video or audio snippets, small bits of text, animations, a web page • Characterstics • Share and reuse • Digital • Metadata-tagged • Description information: title, author, format, content description, instructional function • Instructional and Target-Oriented

  8. Learning style models • To classify and characterise how students receive and process information. • Refer to fundamental aspects: • cognitive style • learning strategy • Well-known models: Myers-Briggs, Kolb, Felder-Silverman

  9. Learning style modelsFelder–Silverman Learning Style Model Each learner has a preference on each of the four dimensions: • Active – Reflective • learning by doing – learning by thinking • group work – work alone • Sensing – Intuitive • concrete material – abstract material • more practical – more innovative and creative • patient / not patient with details • standard procedures – challenges • Visual – Verbal • learning from pictures – learning from words • Sequential – Global • learn in linear steps – learn in large leaps • good in using partial knowledge – need “big picture”

  10. Learning style models- FSLSM (cont’)Types of combination of LS dimensions reflective/sensing/visual/sequential reflective/sensing/visual/global reflective/sensing/verbal/sequential reflective/sensing/verbal/global reflective/intuitive/visual/sequential reflective/intuitive/visual/global reflective/intuitive/verbal/sequential reflective/intuitive/verbal/global • active/sensing/visual/sequential • active/sensing/visual/global • active/sensing/verbal/sequential • active/sensing/verbal/global • active/intuitive/visual/sequential • active/intuitive/visual/global • active/intuitive/verbal/sequential • active/intuitive/verbal/global 10

  11. FSLSM (cont’) • Index of Learning Style(ILS) questionnaire • 44 questions, 11 for each LS dimensions • Scales of the dimensions: 11

  12. A reductive questionnaire • Based on FSLSM • To be used for collecting initial learning style information of students • Aims at saving time for students to answer • Contains of 20 questions • some from the ILS questionnaire, the rest from us • 5 questions for each LS dimension • The questionnaire • Graphical presentation:

  13. Implications of LSs in education • make learners aware of their learning styles and show them their individual strengths and weaknesses • students can be supported by matching the teaching style with their learning styles

  14. Outline Introduction Learning objects and Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system Automatic detection of learning styles in LMSs Conception of an adaptive e-learning system POLCA – Implementation and results Conclusion 14

  15. Ontology in education • Ontology represents domain knowledge by defining terminology, concepts, relations, and hierarchies • Ex. of educational ontology: OntoEdu • It enables education applications to share and reuse educational content • Ontology is machine-readable and reasonable: • Suitable for description of learning objects • It will be faster and more convenient to query and retrieval educational material

  16. Intelligent agents in education • how to provide adaptive teaching which is suitable to each student? • the use of Artificial Intelligence (AI) techniques such as Multi Agents or Agent Society-based architectures • intelligence may be applied through user models to make assumptions about the user’s state of knowledge, which may in turn help determine the user’s learning needs • may enable the system to dynamically personalise applications and services to meet user preferences, goals and desires

  17. Outline Introduction Learning objects and Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system Automatic detection of learning styles in LMSs Conception of an adaptive e-learning system POLCA – Implementation and results Conclusion 17

  18. Introduction to LMSs • Developed for teachers to create and manage their courses. • Can be built based on pedagogical strategies: more learner-centered or more teacher-centered • The applied strategies focus mainly on how to teach learners from a general point of view, without considering the individual needs of learners.

  19. Adaptivity in LMSs • Adaptivity indicates all kinds of automatic adaptation to individual learners’ needs. • Course’s content • Personal annotations

  20. Benefits from using the Felder-Silverman learning style model in LMSs FSLSM describes learning style in more detail, represents also balanced preferences  allows providing more accurate adaptivity FSLSM considers learning styles as “flexibly stable”  LSs might change over time. An adaptive system can adjust to the change. FSLSM considers learning styles as tendencies  a student might act differently from his LS tendency. An adaptive system should consider also exceptions and extraordinary situations.

  21. Behaviour of learners in LMSs with respect to learning styles • Active/Reflective dimension • Active learners: • do exercise first then look at examples • perform more self-assessment questions • Reflective learners: • visit examples first then perform exercises • spend more time on examples and outlines • performed better on questions about interpreting predefined solutions

  22. Behaviour of learners Benefits • Make teachers and course developers aware of the different needs, different ways of learning of their students. • Should provide courses with many different learning materials that support different learning styles. • Might present learning materials in different orders corresponding to different preference for LSs.

  23. Providing adaptive courses in LMSs Course elements Adaptation features 23

  24. Providing adaptive courses in LMSsCourse elements • A course consists of several chapters, where for each chapter, adaptivity can be provided. • Each chapter includes: • An outline • Content objects • definitions, algorithms, graphics, etc. • Examples • Self-assessment tests • Exercises • A summary

  25. Providing adaptive courses in LMSs Adaptation features • Indicate how a course can change for students with different learning styles. • Include: • the sequence of LOs and their positions. • the number of presented examples and exercises

  26. Adaptation features (cont’) • For active learners: • outlines are only presented once before the content objects • the number of exercises is increased • a small number of examples is presented • self-assessment tests are presented at the beginning and at the end of a chapter • a final summary is provided in order to conclude the chapter

  27. Adaptation features (cont’) • For reflective learners: • the number of exercises and self-assessment tests is decreased • content objects are presented before examples • outlines are additionally provided between the topics • a conclusion is presented straight after all content objects

  28. Methodology of incorporating LSs in a LMS • Creating adaptive course • Course structure • Learning objects with learning style properties • enough interchangeable LO? • Student modelling • A LS questionnaire for initialising • An automatic approach for revising • Providing adaptive course • Combination of selecting and ordering learning objects

  29. Outline Introduction Learning objects and Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system Automatic detection of learning styles in LMSs Conception of an adaptive e-learning system POLCA – Implementation and results Conclusion 29

  30. Problems with collaborative student modelling that use a questionnaire • Uncertainty because of: • a lack of students’ motivation • a lack of self-awareness about their learning preferences • the influence of expectations from others • Questionnaires are static and describe the learning style of a student at a specific point of time • The result depends much on students’ mood

  31. Benefits of using automatic student modelling • does not require additional effort from students • is free of uncertainty • can be more fault-tolerant due to information gathering over a longer period of time • can recognise and update the change of students’ learning preferences

  32. Automatic student modelling approaches

  33. Automatic student modelling approaches data-driven vs. literature-based

  34. Automatic student modellingThe data-driven approach • uses sample data in order to build a model for identifying learning styles from the behaviour of learners • aims at building a model that imitates the ILS questionnaire • Advantage: the model can be very accurate due to the use of real data • Disadvantage: the approach strictly depends on the available data and is developed for specific systems

  35. Automatic student modellingThe literature-based approach • uses the behaviour of students in order to get hints about their learning style preferences • then applies a rule-based method to calculate LSs from the number of matching hints • Advantage: generic and applicable for data gathered from any course • Disadvantage: might have problems in estimating the importance of the different hints

  36. Outline Introduction Learning objects and Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system Automatic detection of learning styles in LMSs Conception of an adaptive e-learning system POLCA – Implementation and results Conclusion 36

  37. Methodology for implementing adaptation Annotating learning objects Estimating learning styles Providing adaptivity 37

  38. Methodology Annotating learning objects • Each learning object is annotated with one subtype of any element in the set of 16 types of combination • E.g: Annotation of an example LO is RefSen 38

  39. MethodologyEstimating learning styles Expected time spent on each learning object, Timeexpected_stay, is determined. The time that a learner actually spent on each learning object, Timespent, is recorded. Ratios for number of visits with respect to each LS element 39

  40. MethodologyEstimating learning styles (cont’) An example  Learning style: moderate Active/Reflective, and strong Visual. 40

  41. MethodologyProviding adaptivity • Assumption: interchangeable learning objects are sufficient for each learning content. • The LMS automatically delivers suitable LOs for each learner based on: • What learning content he choses • His learning style that has been identified • Previous example: only LOs with Act/Ref/Vis annotations. • Combined with changing their appearance order 41

  42. System’s adaptation

  43. System’s domain ontology

  44. Outline Introduction Learning objects Learning styles Ontologies and intelligent agents in education Incorporation of learning styles in a learning management system Automatic detection of learning styles in LMSs Conception of an adaptive e-learning system POLCA – Implementation and results Conclusion 44

  45. System architecture A multi-agent one with artificial agents 45

  46. System interface and functionality • Administrator: • updates personal information of teachers and students, • views statistics about each individual or all of students' behaviour with respect to FSLSM • other management tasks

  47. System interface and functionalityTeachers • update list of his courses: subjects, chapters, sections • update his learning objects: outlines, definitions, algorithms, graphics, examples, exercises, summaries, etc. • set up tests and see participated students' results • accept application requests for his course from students • view statistics of students' behaviour related to their learning styles

  48. System interface and functionalityStudents • register for a course • take registered courses • do the tests • see the test results

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