HCAIJun 10, 2023

Learnersourcing in the Age of AI: Student, Educator and Machine Partnerships for Content Creation

arXiv:2306.06386v152 citationsh-index: 47
Originality Synthesis-oriented
AI Analysis

This work addresses the problem of improving educational content creation for students and educators, but it is incremental as it builds on existing learnersourcing literature without introducing new methods.

The paper tackles the limited adoption of learnersourcing by proposing a framework that integrates AI and learning sciences to address key challenges like content quality and engagement, illustrated through case studies of existing systems.

Engaging students in creating novel content, also referred to as learnersourcing, is increasingly recognised as an effective approach to promoting higher-order learning, deeply engaging students with course material and developing large repositories of content suitable for personalized learning. Despite these benefits, some common concerns and criticisms are associated with learnersourcing (e.g., the quality of resources created by students, challenges in incentivising engagement and lack of availability of reliable learnersourcing systems), which have limited its adoption. This paper presents a framework that considers the existing learnersourcing literature, the latest insights from the learning sciences and advances in AI to offer promising future directions for developing learnersourcing systems. The framework is designed around important questions and human-AI partnerships relating to four key aspects: (1) creating novel content, (2) evaluating the quality of the created content, (3) utilising learnersourced contributions of students and (4) enabling instructors to support students in the learnersourcing process. We then present two comprehensive case studies that illustrate the application of the proposed framework in relation to two existing popular learnersourcing systems.

Foundations

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

Your Notes