how can cognitive science improve online learning & education?

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Slides from Google Tech Talk by Joseph Jay Williams. The video presentation is on Youtube: http://youtu.be/VKW5lZqBWgI Title: How can Cognitive Science improve Online Learning at Google and Google in Education? Abstract: Knowledge and technology that maximizes human learning has financial value for Google in customer education and internal training, as well as social value for the public initiatives of Google in Education. Recent research in Cognitive Science provides complementary insights to those gained from practical experience and the research in Computer Science, Education and other Learning Sciences. This talk considers how learning can be improved by: (1) Asking questions and requesting explanations; (2) Presenting specific examples to illustrate abstract principles; (3) Using tests as pedagogical rather than assessment tools. Moreover, online education provides the unique opportunity of hybrid research that is simultaneously applied and academic. Online environments satisfy the scientific requirements of randomized experiments and precise control, as well as the practical need for ecological validity, fidelity, and scalable dissemination. The Cognitive Science focus on identifying both similarities and differences across learning contexts positions it well for doing research that simultaneously advances public education and a corporate mission. In addition to presenting ongoing research at Khan Academy and MOOCs like EdX, I discuss how analogous principles can be explored in teaching end-users Google Power Search, internal training, and customer education. Bio: Joseph Jay Williams (For resources on Cognitive Science, Online Education, Ed-Tech see: www.josephjaywilliams.com/education, sites.cognitivescience.co/learn, or www.learningresearch.net) does Cognitive Science research on how generating explanations promotes learning, and Online Education work on improving learning from mathematics exercises (Khan Academy), increasing motivation to learn by changing people's beliefs about intelligence (Project for Education Research that Scales: www.perts.net), teaching metacognitive & learning strategies in Massive Open Online Courses (EdX), and using technology to change educational and health habits. He is finishing his PhD in Psychology at UC Berkeley, and also has interests in consulting for corporate e-learning and training, web development for online education, using journalism to disseminate research to practitioners, and education in online search and problem-solving for students and entrepreneurs.

TRANSCRIPT

How can Cognitive Science improve Online Learning?

Joseph Jay WilliamsJoseph_Williams@berkeley.eduwww.JosephJayWilliams.com/education

CognitiveScience.Co/learnwww.LearningResearch.net

1

Research Landscape

• Qualitative analyses

• Randomized Controlled Trials

• Longitudinal studies

• Educational Data Mining

• Cognitive Science

2

Cognitive Science

3

• Learning: “Adding” vs. “Integrating” information.• Before: Problem-based learning• During: Request Explanations• After: Assessments as instructional tools – Testing & Mixing

• Learning that promotes learning • Motivation• Strategies• Online search

• Resources: • Review of Cognitive Science with practical value: www.josephjaywilliams.com/education• Wiki with resources on Online Education: sites.cognitivescience.co/learn• Contact between researchers & practitioners: www.learningresearch.net

4

Preview

5

Add object

to bucket

Integrate webpage

with internet

Content Exercise

Transfer is rareLearning: Add vs. Integrate

• Consider:– Scenario 1: General invading a fortress can’t use full force, part of force insufficient– Scenario 2: Doctors destroying an internal tumor can’t use strong rays, but weak

rays aren’t enough

• Transfer extremely low (Gick & Holyoak, 1984)

• Motivated MBA students appeared to learn extremely well, but failed to transfer to face-to-face in real life (Gentner, Loewenstein, & Thompson, 2003)

• Transfer is so rare that it’s not a plausible goal (Detterman, 1993)

6

Transfer is rare

• Problem Based Learning (Hmelo-Silver, 2006; Needham & Begg, 1998; Schwartz, 1998)

7

How do you…?Is it possible to…?

Before: Start with Questions & Problems

8

Why…? Free study, Think Aloud…

Learning Measures

(Williams & Lombrozo, 2010)

(Williams, Lombrozo, & Rehder, in press)

(Williams, Walker, Lombrozo, 2012)

During: Request explanations

9

Statistics problem

• Learn a university’s ranking system from examples(Schwartz & Martin, 2004, Belenky & Nokes, 2011)

Sarah was ranked higher.

Rule for ranking John Ranked? Tom

Higher personal score 85% > 69%

Points above average 6% > 4%

Points below maximum –5% > –18%

Number of deviations above average (Z-score)

0.75 < 1.3

85% in HistoryMin of 67%, Max 90% Class Average 79%Standard Deviation 8%

69% in PhysicsMin of 42%, Max 87% Class Average 65%Standard Deviation 3%

>

Accuracy change

10

Single Anomaly Multiple Anomalies0.0

0.1

0.2

0.3

0.4

0.5Free Study

Explain

Accu

racy

impr

ovem

ent f

rom

Pr

e-te

st to

Pos

t-Te

st

Write Thoughts

Williams, Walker, & Lombrozo, 2012

Key Findings

• Explaining increased:• Discovery of principles (Williams & Lombrozo, 2010)

• Use of existing knowledge (Williams & Lombrozo, 2013)

• Explanation’s effect was selective:• Same or even worse memory • Impaired learning if patterns were unreliable (Williams, Lombrozo,

Rehder, in press)

• Similar effects in 5 year olds (Walker, Williams, Lombrozo, & Gopnik, under revision)

Online Mathematics Exercises

• Khan Academy:

• Explain why that solution is correct.

• Here is another student/teacher’s explanation.• Grade both.• Rate how similar they are.

Benefits of explanation

• Instructor guided & learner generated• Learning without feedback• Abstract principles

• The “Testing Effect” (Roediger & Karpicke, 2006)

14

Immediate test: Study+Study ~= Study+TestAfter hours, days, weeks: Study+Study < Study+Test

Learners claim: Study+Study > Study+Test

After: Use Assessments as Instructional Tools

• Mixing Effect (Rohrer, 2009)

• Ten Benefits of Testing (Roediger et al, 2011)

15

After: Efficient Assessments use Mixing Effect

• Support Randomized Experiments or A/B Testing• Precise delivery & control• Quantitative measures of learning

• Ecological validity• Evidence-based decisions• Fidelity• Scalability• Iterative improvement

16

Real-World Laboratories

• Motivation• Learning Strategies• Online search

17

Learning that improves Learning

• Beliefs about intelligence (Dweck, 2006)• Do you agree that…– Your intelligence is something very basic about you that

you can’t change very much. (Fixed Theory).– No matter how much intelligence you have, you can always

change it quite a bit. (Malleable Theory).

• Teach a malleable theory?

18

Increasing motivation

19

Randomized Controlled Trial: Middle, High School, Community College. (Paunesku, Romero et al, 2011; 2012)

Increasing motivation

• Before: Preparatory questions• During: Explanations• After: Applying concept

Currently applying these principles to learning a “Growth Mindset”

Next directions:• Create video versions for MOOCs, Khan Academy, students• Change feedback in Khan Academy exercises

20

Cognitive + Social Psychology

• Teach learning strategies through videos in MOOCs

• Transfer? (Clark & Mayer, 2011)

• Assessment?

• Explanation; Reciprocal Teaching (Palinscar & Brown, 1984)

• Change “theory” of learning• Habit & Behavior Change (Fogg, 2002)

• Technology (Rose et al, 2008)

21

Learning Strategies

• Sophisticated uses• “Theory”: Fishing vs.

Toolkit for Problem-solving

22

Content Exercise

Online search

• Rate the plausibility of each answer.• Predict Accuracy. • Rate similarity.• Grade explanations.

23

1 2 3 4 5 6 7

“Best” vs. “Big” Data

Resources

• Selection of Cognitive Science research applicable to (Online) Education• www.josephjaywilliams.com/education• Wiki with resources on Online Education: sites.cognitivescience.co/learn• Contact between researchers & practitioners: www.learningresearch.net• Comprehensive Wiki & Newsletter on K-12 Ed-Tech www.edsurge.com• Policy Prescriptions for schools National Center for Education and the Economy www.ncee.org Surpassing Shanghai, by Mark Tucker• Institute of Education Sciences “evidence-based education” www.whatworks.ed.gov• E-learning in Industry & Workforce, Online Corporate Training & Development

www.elearningguild.com www.astd.org

Questions?

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