Authors
Kurt VanLehn, Arthur C Graesser, G Tanner Jackson, Pamela Jordan, Andrew Olney, Carolyn P Rosé
Publication date
2007/2
Journal
Cognitive science
Volume
31
Issue
1
Pages
3-62
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Description
It is often assumed that engaging in a one‐on‐one dialogue with a tutor is more effective than listening to a lecture or reading a text. Although earlier experiments have not always supported this hypothesis, this may be due in part to allowing the tutors to cover different content than the noninteractive instruction. In 7 experiments, we tested the interaction hypothesis under the constraint that (a) all students covered the same content during instruction, (b) the task domain was qualitative physics, (c) the instruction was in natural language as opposed to mathematical or other formal languages, and (d) the instruction conformed with a widely observed pattern in human tutoring: Graesser, Person, and Magliano's 5‐step frame. In the experiments, we compared 2 kinds of human tutoring (spoken and computer mediated) with 2 kinds of natural‐language‐based computer tutoring (Why2‐Atlas and Why2‐AutoTutor) and 3 …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
K VanLehn, AC Graesser, GT Jackson, P Jordan… - Cognitive science, 2007