CategoriesJournal article

From the Automated Assessment of Student Essay Content to Highly Informative Feedback: a Case Study

How can we provide students with highly informative feedback on their essays using natural language processing?

Check out our new paper, led by Sebastian Gombert, where we present a case study on using GBERT and T5 models to generate feedback for educational psychology students.

In this paper:

➡ We implemented a two-step pipeline that segments the essays and predicts codes from the segments. The codes are used to generate feedback texts that inform the students about the correctness of their solutions and the content areas they need to improve.

➡ We used 689 manually labelled essays as training data for our models. We compared GBERT, T5, and bag-of-words baselines for scoring the segments and the codes. The results showed that the transformer-based models outperformed the baselines in both steps.

➡ We evaluated the feedback using a randomised controlled trial. The control group received essential feedback, while the treatment group received highly informative feedback based on our pipeline. We used a six-item survey to measure the perception of feedback.

➡ We found that highly informative feedback had positive effects on helpfulness and reflection. The students in the treatment group reported higher levels of satisfaction, usefulness, and learning than the students in the control group.

➡ Our paper demonstrates the potential of natural language processing for providing highly informative feedback on student essays. We hope that our work will inspire more research and practice in this area.

You can read the full paper here.

https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s40593-023-00387-6

CategoriesMultimodal Tutor

Detecting Mistakes in CPR Training with Multimodal Data and Neural Networks

This journal article, the fourth and  main experiment of my PhD thesis was published in gold Open Access in the MDPI Sensors journal as part of the Special Issue Advanced Sensors Technology in Education by Daniele Di Mitri,Jan Schneider, Marcus Specht and Hendrik Drachsler  Image

Abstract

This study investigated to what extent multimodal data can be used to detect mistakes during Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) training.