Authors
Douglas C Merrill, Brian J Reiser, Michael Ranney, J Gregory Trafton
Publication date
1992/7/1
Journal
The Journal of the learning sciences
Volume
2
Issue
3
Pages
277-305
Publisher
Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
Description
There has been much debate about instructional strategies for computerized learning environments. Many of the arguments designed to choose between the various philosophies have appealed, at least implicitly, to the behavior of effective human teachers. In this article, we compare the guidance and support offered by human tutors with that offered by intelligent tutoring systems. First, we review research on human tutoring strategies in various domains. Then we investigate the capabilities of a widely used technique for providing feedback, model tracing. Finally, we contrast the types of guidance and support provided by human tutors with those in intelligent tutoring systems, by examining the process of recovering from impasses encountered during problem solving. In general, the support offered by human tutors is more flexible and more subtle than that offered by model tracing tutors, but the two are more similar …
Total citations
199319941995199619971998199920002001200220032004200520062007200820092010201120122013201420152016201720182019202020212022202320243748587111791716151928211326201512201626182824151615109
Scholar articles
DC Merrill, BJ Reiser, M Ranney, JG Trafton - The Journal of the learning sciences, 1992