Authors
Andrew Gibson, Kirsty Kitto
Publication date
2015/3/16
Book
Proceedings of the fifth international conference on learning analytics and knowledge
Pages
275-279
Description
Reflective writing is an important learning task to help foster reflective practice, but even when assessed it is rarely analysed or critically reviewed due to its subjective and affective nature. We propose a process for capturing subjective and affective analytics based on the identification and recontextualisation of anomalous features within reflective text. We evaluate 2 human supervised trials of the process, and so demonstrate the potential for an automated Anomaly Recontextualisation process for Learning Analytics.
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