The Effects of Generative AI Agents and Scaffolding on Enhancing Students' Comprehension of Visual Learning Analytics
Visual learning analytics (VLA) is becoming increasingly adopted in educational technologies and learning analytics dashboards to convey critical insights to students and educators. Yet many students experienced difficulties in comprehending complex VLA due to their limited data visualisation litera...
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Zusammenfassung: | Visual learning analytics (VLA) is becoming increasingly adopted in
educational technologies and learning analytics dashboards to convey critical
insights to students and educators. Yet many students experienced difficulties
in comprehending complex VLA due to their limited data visualisation literacy.
While conventional scaffolding approaches like data storytelling have shown
effectiveness in enhancing students' comprehension of VLA, these approaches
remain difficult to scale and adapt to individual learning needs. Generative AI
(GenAI) technologies, especially conversational agents, offer potential
solutions by providing personalised and dynamic support to enhance students'
comprehension of VLA. This study investigates the effectiveness of GenAI
agents, particularly when integrated with scaffolding techniques, in improving
students' comprehension of VLA. A randomised controlled trial was conducted
with 117 higher education students to compare the effects of two types of GenAI
agents: passive agents, which respond to student queries, and proactive agents,
which utilise scaffolding questions, against standalone scaffolding in a VLA
comprehension task. The results show that passive agents yield comparable
improvements to standalone scaffolding both during and after the intervention.
Notably, proactive GenAI agents significantly enhance students' VLA
comprehension compared to both passive agents and standalone scaffolding, with
these benefits persisting beyond the intervention. These findings suggest that
integrating GenAI agents with scaffolding can have lasting positive effects on
students' comprehension skills and support genuine learning. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2409.11645 |