Speech analysis of teaching assistant interventions in small group collaborative problem solving with undergraduate engineering students

IF 6.7 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH British Journal of Educational Technology Pub Date : 2024-03-01 DOI:10.1111/bjet.13449
Cynthia M. D'Angelo, Robin Jephthah Rajarathinam
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This descriptive study focuses on using voice activity detection (VAD) algorithms to extract student speech data in order to better understand the collaboration of small group work and the impact of teaching assistant (TA) interventions in undergraduate engineering discussion sections. Audio data were recorded from individual students wearing head-mounted noise-cancelling microphones. Video data of each student group were manually coded for collaborative behaviours (eg, group task relatedness, group verbal interaction and group talk content) of students and TA–student interactions. The analysis includes information about the turn taking, overall speech duration patterns and amounts of overlapping speech observed both when TAs were intervening with groups and when they were not. We found that TAs very rarely provided explicit support regarding collaboration. Key speech metrics, such as amount of turn overlap and maximum turn duration, revealed important information about the nature of student small group discussions and TA interventions. TA interactions during small group collaboration are complex and require nuanced treatments when considering the design of supportive tools.

Practitioner notes

What is already known about this topic

  • Student turn taking can provide information about the nature of student discussions and collaboration.
  • Real classroom audio data of small groups typically have lots of background noise and present challenges for audio analysis.
  • TAs have little training in how to productively intervene with students about collaborative skills.

What this paper adds

  • TA interaction with groups primarily focused on task progress and understanding of concepts with negligible explicit support on building collaborative skills.
  • TAs intervened with the groups often which gave the students little time for uptake of their suggestions or deeper discussion.
  • Student turn overlap was higher without the presence of TAs.
  • Maximum turn duration can be an important real-time turn metric to identify the least verbally active student participant in a group.

Implications for practice and/or policy

  • TA training should include information about how to monitor groups for collaborative behaviours and when and how they should intervene to provide feedback and support.
  • TA feedback systems should keep track of previous interventions by TAs (especially in contexts where there are multiple TAs facilitating) and the duration since previous intervention to ensure that TAs do not intervene with a group too frequently with little time for student uptake.
  • Maximum turn duration could be used as a real-time metric to identify the least verbally active student in a group so that support could be provided to them by the TAs.

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工程学本科生小组合作解决问题过程中助教干预的语音分析
这项描述性研究的重点是使用语音活动检测(VAD)算法提取学生的语音数据,以便更好地了解本科生工程讨论环节中小组合作的情况以及助教(TA)干预的影响。音频数据由佩戴头戴式降噪麦克风的学生个人录制。每个学生小组的视频数据都经过人工编码,以反映学生的协作行为(如小组任务相关性、小组语言互动和小组谈话内容)以及助教与学生的互动。分析包括在助教干预小组和不干预小组时观察到的轮流发言、总体发言持续时间模式和重叠发言数量等信息。我们发现,助教很少在合作方面提供明确的支持。关键的言语指标,如轮次重叠量和最长轮次持续时间,揭示了有关学生小组讨论和助教干预性质的重要信息。在考虑设计支持工具时,小组合作期间助教的互动是复杂的,需要细致入微的处理。小组的真实课堂音频数据通常有大量背景噪音,给音频分析带来了挑战。助教在如何对学生的协作技能进行有效干预方面的培训很少。本文补充的内容是,助教与小组的互动主要集中在任务进展和对概念的理解上,对培养协作技能的明确支持微乎其微。助教经常对小组进行干预,这使得学生很少有时间采纳助教的建议或进行更深入的讨论。在没有助教在场的情况下,学生的回合重叠率较高。最长轮次持续时间可以作为一个重要的实时轮次衡量标准,以确定小组中语言最不活跃的学生参与者。对实践和/或政策的影响助教培训应包括如何监控小组的合作行为,以及何时和如何进行干预以提供反馈和支持。助教反馈系统应记录助教之前的干预(尤其是在有多名助教协助的情况下)以及自之前干预以来的持续时间,以确保助教不会过于频繁地干预一个小组,而没有时间让学生吸收。最长转身时间可作为一个实时指标,用于识别小组中言语最不活跃的学生,以便助教为他们提供支持。
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来源期刊
British Journal of Educational Technology
British Journal of Educational Technology EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
15.60
自引率
4.50%
发文量
111
期刊介绍: BJET is a primary source for academics and professionals in the fields of digital educational and training technology throughout the world. The Journal is published by Wiley on behalf of The British Educational Research Association (BERA). It publishes theoretical perspectives, methodological developments and high quality empirical research that demonstrate whether and how applications of instructional/educational technology systems, networks, tools and resources lead to improvements in formal and non-formal education at all levels, from early years through to higher, technical and vocational education, professional development and corporate training.
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