The FLoRA Engine: Using Analytics to Measure and Facilitate Learners' own Regulation Activities

December 12, 2024 Β· Declared Dead Β· πŸ› Journal of Learning Analytics

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Authors Xinyu Li, Yizhou Fan, Tongguang Li, Mladen Rakovic, Shaveen Singh, Joep van der Graaf, Lyn Lim, Johanna Moore, Inge Molenaar, Maria Bannert, Dragan Gasevic arXiv ID 2412.09763 Category cs.HC: Human-Computer Interaction Cross-listed cs.CY Citations 7 Venue Journal of Learning Analytics Last Checked 4 months ago
Abstract
The focus of education is increasingly set on learners' ability to regulate their own learning within technology-enhanced learning environments (TELs). Prior research has shown that self-regulated learning (SRL) leads to better learning performance. However, many learners struggle to self-regulate their learning productively, as they typically need to navigate a myriad of cognitive, metacognitive, and motivational processes that SRL demands. To address these challenges, the FLoRA engine is developed to assist students, workers, and professionals in improving their SRL skills and becoming productive lifelong learners. FLoRA incorporates several learning tools that are grounded in SRL theory and enhanced with learning analytics (LA), aimed at improving learners' mastery of different SRL skills. The engine tracks learners' SRL behaviours during a learning task and provides automated scaffolding to help learners effectively regulate their learning. The main contributions of FLoRA include (1) creating instrumentation tools that unobtrusively collect intensively sampled, fine-grained, and temporally ordered trace data about learners' learning actions, (2) building a trace parser that uses LA and related analytical technique (e.g., process mining) to model and understand learners' SRL processes, and (3) providing a scaffolding module that presents analytics-based adaptive, personalised scaffolds based on students' learning progress. The architecture and implementation of the FLoRA engine are also discussed in this paper.
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