Proceedings of the 1st International Conference on Learning Analytics and Knowledge 2011
DOI: 10.1145/2090116.2090120
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Discourse-centric learning analytics

Abstract: Abstract. Drawing on sociocultural discourse analysis and argumentation theory, we motivate a focus on learners' discourse as a promising site for identifying patterns of activity which correspond to meaningful learning and knowledge construction. However, software platforms must gain access to qualitative information about the rhetorical dimensions to discourse contributions to enable such analytics. This is difficult to extract from naturally occurring text, but the emergence of more-structured annotation an… Show more

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Cited by 82 publications
(49 citation statements)
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“…Our example comes from work at the Open University, based around the Cohere social annotation and knowledge mapping tool (Buckingham Shum, 2008) and subsequent work on its potential for sociocultural discourse-centric learning analytics (De Liddo et al, 2011). Cohere is a web application for mapping ideas, concepts, and arguments that can be annotated directly onto source websites.…”
Section: Example: Discourse-centric Analytics For Epistemic Beliefsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Our example comes from work at the Open University, based around the Cohere social annotation and knowledge mapping tool (Buckingham Shum, 2008) and subsequent work on its potential for sociocultural discourse-centric learning analytics (De Liddo et al, 2011). Cohere is a web application for mapping ideas, concepts, and arguments that can be annotated directly onto source websites.…”
Section: Example: Discourse-centric Analytics For Epistemic Beliefsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Students can then be advised to re-assess their participation, or simply to reflect on their position in the network. The text exchanged by students in discussion forums is also a valuable data source for more recent techniques known as discourse-centric analytics that seek to detect evidence of learning, and language usage patterns that are associated with positive academic outcomes (Ferguson and Buckingham Shum 2011;De Liddo et al 2011;Knight and Littleton 2015). The characterization of these discussions offers the possibility to provide highly detailed and potentially effective feedback for students to increase their performance.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Computer environments may be seen as complementary to such dialogue, in particular where they formalize, through the user interface conceptual model, some of the systems through which exploratory and accountable dialogue are more likely to occur -the "ground rules" of each. It is thus that systems have been developed specifically to support particular types of formalized argumentation schema (Clark et al, 2007;De Liddo, Buckingham Shum, Quinto, Bachler, & Cannavacciuolo, 2011;Scheuer et al, 2010;Weinberger, Ertl, Fischer, & Mandl, 2005;Weinberger & Fischer, 2006). Again, we highlight the range of ways in which CSCL argumentation aligns with the table with some scripting aimed at individual learning gains (particularly around argumentation schema), and other methods aimed to aid in intersubjective meaning making.…”
Section: Structured Dialogue and Cscl Environmentsmentioning
confidence: 99%