An Alternate Statistical Lens to Look at Collaboration Data: Extreme Value Theory

K Sharma, J Olsen - 2019 - repository.isls.org
2019repository.isls.org
To provide beneficial feedback to students during their collaboration, it is important to
identify behaviors that are indicative of good collaboration. However, in a collaborative
learning session, students engage in a range of behaviors and it can be difficult to indicate
which of those behaviors correlate with higher outcomes. In this paper, we propose using
Extreme Value Theory (EVT), a method that considers the data points in the tail (upper or
lower) of the distribution, to analyse the relationship between collaborative process …
To provide beneficial feedback to students during their collaboration, it is important to identify behaviors that are indicative of good collaboration. However, in a collaborative learning session, students engage in a range of behaviors and it can be difficult to indicate which of those behaviors correlate with higher outcomes. In this paper, we propose using Extreme Value Theory (EVT), a method that considers the data points in the tail (upper or lower) of the distribution, to analyse the relationship between collaborative process variables and outcome measures through insights derived from high impact, low-frequency events. Specifically, in this paper, we analyse the relationship between dual gaze patterns and outcome measures across two different datasets. In both datasets we found that students with lower outcomes had lower focus during the collaborative session. This paper provides a contribution by both introducing EVT as a viable method for analysing CSCL data as well as demonstrating the effectiveness of eye- tracking as a collaborative indicator to use to adapt to in real-time.
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