CYLGMLApr 15, 2019

How Widely Can Prediction Models be Generalized? Performance Prediction in Blended Courses

arXiv:1904.07328v246 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of early and cross-class prediction for student performance in blended education, which is incremental as it builds on prior correlations but extends to generalization and timing aspects.

The study tackled the problem of predicting student performance in blended courses by analyzing how well models generalize across different course offerings and segments, finding that models trained on one offering could predict performance in another with moderate accuracy but struggled across different courses.

Blended courses that mix in-person instruction with online platforms are increasingly popular in secondary education. These tools record a rich amount of data on students' study habits and social interactions. Prior research has shown that these metrics are correlated with students' performance in face to face classes. However, predictive models for blended courses are still limited and have not yet succeeded at early prediction or cross-class predictions even for repeated offerings of the same course. In this work, we use data from two offerings of two different undergraduate courses to train and evaluate predictive models on student performance based upon persistent student characteristics including study habits and social interactions. We analyze the performance of these models on the same offering, on different offerings of the same course, and across courses to see how well they generalize. We also evaluate the models on different segments of the courses to determine how early reliable predictions can be made. This work tells us in part how much data is required to make robust predictions and how cross-class data may be used, or not, to boost model performance. The results of this study will help us better understand how similar the study habits, social activities, and the teamwork styles are across semesters for students in each performance category. These trained models also provide an avenue to improve our existing support platforms to better support struggling students early in the semester with the goal of providing timely intervention.

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