2005
DOI: 10.21236/ada438317
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Automated Socratic Tutors for High-Level Command Skills

Abstract: Under stress, human decision-makers revert to their best-practiced habits. This includes military commanders who may fail to act effectively under pressure for lack of sufficient practice. The US Army Research Institute (ARI) developed a training methodology emphasizing repeated exposure to small challenging vignettes enabling drill on command decision-making. Rather than role-play to a simulated conclusion, mentors focus on analyses and dialogues that explore reasoning and rationale. Adoption of this methodol… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Domeshek et al (2002) conceptualized the Socratic method as follows: "Socratic instruction is a kind of teaching interaction typically applied in high-level professional education (e.g., law and business) and most often characterized by its external form: the teacher asks a lot of questions, and the student answers." Based on this notion of the Socratic method, Domeshek et al (2004) developed ComMentor, an automated Socratic tutoring system, for command skills for high-level professional education such as law and business. This system is claimed to be able to guide the student in a Socratic mode as an expert would: the teacher asks questions and the student answers.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Domeshek et al (2002) conceptualized the Socratic method as follows: "Socratic instruction is a kind of teaching interaction typically applied in high-level professional education (e.g., law and business) and most often characterized by its external form: the teacher asks a lot of questions, and the student answers." Based on this notion of the Socratic method, Domeshek et al (2004) developed ComMentor, an automated Socratic tutoring system, for command skills for high-level professional education such as law and business. This system is claimed to be able to guide the student in a Socratic mode as an expert would: the teacher asks questions and the student answers.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The sequence of the questions is intended to help the student reconstruct the logic of expert situation analysis and decision-making. Domeshek et al (2004) described four characteristics of a typical Socratic session: (1) a thoughtprovoking problem, (2) a student's attempt to provide solutions, (3) the instructor's repeated exploration and challenging of the student's solutions, and (4) incremental justification, elaboration, refinement, and revision of both the student's understanding of the situation under discussion and their proposed solution.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The level of ambition and proven capability for ITSs has also been increasing, and research is pushing practical ITS tools from the level of straightforward procedural tasks (e.g. Munro & Pizzini, 1995) or closed-world formal reasoning tasks (Anderson, et al, 1985) to more open-ended analysis and decision tasks such as tactical decision-making (Domeshek, Holman, & Ross, 2002).…”
Section: Problem Being Addressedmentioning
confidence: 99%