1 / 16

Giving More Adaptation Flexibility to Authors of Adaptive Assessments

Giving More Adaptation Flexibility to Authors of Adaptive Assessments. Symeon Retalis University of Piraeus Department of Technology Education and Digital Systems. Need for Adaptation.

taregan
Download Presentation

Giving More Adaptation Flexibility to Authors of Adaptive Assessments

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. Giving More Adaptation Flexibility to Authors of Adaptive Assessments Symeon Retalis University of Piraeus Department of Technology Education and Digital Systems

  2. Need for Adaptation • One can find a great variety of learners in an on-line course or assessment: both in terms of their knowledge, but also their learning style, preferences, etc. • The learning experience becomes more fruitful for the learner when these differences are accounted for, thus offering a tailored experience. AthenaQTI

  3. What do they offer? • They try to estimate the learner’s knowledge on the topics of the learning material. • Based on the learner’s performance, they increase or decrease the knowledge level on the specific topic. • They follow some built-in rules to determine the learner’s knowledge level and also to offer the corresponding material. • The rules always remain the same. • Feedback and help to the learner. AthenaQTI

  4. Assessment Tools Some of the well-known commercial authoring tools include: • Unit-Exam • Questionmark Perception • CourseBuilder • JavaScript QuizMaker • Quiz Rocket • Test Generator Pro None of the above tools supports adaptation. Systems that support adaptation include: • InterBook • SIETTE • AHA! • NetCoach • ActiveMath However, apart from SIETTE, none of the above systems offers assessment authoring. AthenaQTI

  5. What is needed? • More flexibility to the author of the assessment, i.e. the instructor. • Each assessment has different characteristics: target audience, goals, difficulty level, etc. • These characteristics cannot be ignored and handled by the same standard adaptation rules. AthenaQTI

  6. AthenaQTI AthenaQTI is a web-based adaptive assessment authoring tool. • It conforms to the IMS_QTI specification, a fact that gives it the advantage of interoperability • It gives the author the ability to form his/her own adaptation rules. • It allows the author to create, save and edit adaptive assessments on the web, without the installation of any software. • It uses a user model, which also conforms to international standards. AthenaQTI

  7. Standards • The tool conforms to theIMS_QTI (Question & TestInteroperability) specification. • IMS_QTI provides the basic structure for the assessment (representation of questions, results, etc.). • It also enables the interoperability and portability of the assessments among either web-based assessment systems or even Learning Management Systems AthenaQTI

  8. User Model • Necessary for adaptation • Includes: • demographic data • learner’s prior knowledge • learner’s education level and area of expertise • learner’s demonstrated knowledge level on the topics assessed. • history of performance AthenaQTI

  9. Tool’s Operations An author can: • Create and save an assessment • Create and add rules to an assessment • Edit an assessment A learner can: • Take an assessment AthenaQTI

  10. Assessment Creation The author gives details about the assessment, also selecting its topic from a given vocabulary (currently CS related) AthenaQTI

  11. Section Creation • The author adds sections to the assessment and also specifies the section’s details, as well as its thematic topic. • The author is directed to the sub-topics of the assessment’s topic. AthenaQTI

  12. Types of items created • True/False • Multiple choice • Fill in the blanks • Multiple image choice • Image hot-spot AthenaQTI

  13. Rule creation The author defines a number of conditions that will be checked at a ‘trigger point’ (which s/he also defines) and the action that will be taken if they are satisfied. AthenaQTI

  14. Assessment execution • Every learner is recognized and s/he receives the appropriate assessment. Her/his user model is constantly updated during the assessment. • Feedback is given after every question answered. • Every new learner/user has to create a new account. During this process the new user gives demographic data and an estimation of her/his knowledge on different topics. AthenaQTI

  15. Comparison to SIETTE • SIETTE is the most relevant tool to which AthenaQTI can be compared. • In SIETTE, question selection is based on a function that estimates the probability of a correct answer to a particular question, ultimately leading to an estimation of the student’s level of knowledge. The question (amongst the pool of the questions that have not been posed yet) with the highest probability will be posed. • AthenaQTI does not use functions to estimate any parameter; rather the author is given the flexibility to express his/her didactical philosophy and methods through the creation or appropriate rules. • Furthermore, our tool supports a wider range of question types than SIETTE, which seems to handle mainly multiple-choice. • The most important advancement of AthenaQTI lies in the fact that it fully conforms to the IMS_QTI standard, making it very powerful since interoperability is currently a vital issue. AthenaQTI

  16. Evaluation • The tool was given for testing to 11 people who where involved in education (either students or instructors). They were subsequently given questionnaires to complete General findings: • Good navigation • Nice, simple interface • Straightforward meaning of forms/fields • Slight difficulty in understanding immediately the rule creation • More explanatory directions would be useful. AthenaQTI

More Related