HCCYApr 7, 2020

Pedagogical Agents for Fostering Question-Asking Skills in Children

arXiv:2004.03472v153 citations
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This addresses the need to improve question-asking skills in children for educational development, but it is incremental as it builds on existing pedagogical agent methods.

The researchers tackled the problem of infrequent and superficial question-asking in children by developing a pedagogical agent to encourage divergent-thinking questions, finding that interventions increased such questions and fluency but did not significantly alter children's perception of curiosity.

Question asking is an important tool for constructing academic knowledge, and a self-reinforcing driver of curiosity. However, research has found that question asking is infrequent in the classroom and children's questions are often superficial, lacking deep reasoning. In this work, we developed a pedagogical agent that encourages children to ask divergent-thinking questions, a more complex form of questions that is associated with curiosity. We conducted a study with 95 fifth grade students, who interacted with an agent that encourages either convergent-thinking or divergent-thinking questions. Results showed that both interventions increased the number of divergent-thinking questions and the fluency of question asking, while they did not significantly alter children's perception of curiosity despite their high intrinsic motivation scores. In addition, children's curiosity trait has a mediating effect on question asking under the divergent-thinking agent, suggesting that question-asking interventions must be personalized to each student based on their tendency to be curious.

Foundations

The foundational work for this paper's niche, ranked by how specifically the neighbourhood builds on it — not by global fame.

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