NaMemo: Enhancing Lecturers' Interpersonal Competence of Remembering Students' Names
This addresses a specific interpersonal challenge for university lecturers in large classrooms, but it is incremental as it applies existing face-recognition technology to a new educational context.
The authors tackled the problem of university lecturers struggling to remember students' names in large classes by developing NaMemo, a real-time face-recognition system that indicates names, and conducted a pilot feasibility test with plans for further evaluation.
Addressing students by their names helps a teacher to start building rapport with students and thus facilitates their classroom participation. However, this basic yet effective skill has become rather challenging for university lecturers, who have to handle large-sized (sometimes exceeding 100) groups in their daily teaching. To enhance lecturers' competence in delivering interpersonal interaction, we developed NaMemo, a real-time name-indicating system based on a dedicated face-recognition pipeline. This paper presents the system design, the pilot feasibility test, and our plan for the following study, which aims to evaluate NaMemo's impacts on learning and teaching, as well as to probe design implications including privacy considerations.