47 research outputs found
Early Dropout Prediction for Programming Courses Supported by Online Judges
Many educational institutions have been using online judges
in programming classes, amongst others, to provide faster feedback for
students and to reduce the teacher’s workload. There is some evidence
that online judges also help in reducing dropout. Nevertheless, there
is still a high level of dropout noticeable in introductory programming
classes. In this sense, the objective of this work is to develop and validate
a method for predicting student dropout using data from the first two
weeks of study, to allow for early intervention. Instead of the classical
questionnaire-based method, we opted for a non-subjective, data-driven
approach. However, such approaches are known to suffer from a potential
overload of factors, which may not all be relevant to the prediction task.
As a result, we reached a very promising 80% of accuracy, and performed
explicit extraction of the main factors leading to student dropout
Views of institutional leaders on maintaining humanism in today’s practice
Objective
To explore leadership perspectives on how to maintain high quality efficient care that is also person-centered and humanistic.
Methods
The authors interviewed and collected narrative transcripts from a convenience sample of 32 institutional healthcare leaders at seven U.S. medical schools. The institutional leaders were asked to identify factors that either promoted or inhibited humanistic practice. A subset of authors used the constant comparative method to perform qualitative analysis of the interview transcripts. They reached thematic saturation by consensus on the major themes and illustrative examples after six conference calls.
Results
Institutional healthcare leaders supported vision statements, policies, organized educational and faculty development programs, role modeling including their own, and recognition of informal acts of kindness to promote and maintain humanistic patient-care. These measures were described individually rather than as components of a coordinated plan. Few healthcare leaders mentioned plans for organizational or systems changes to promote humanistic clinician-patient relationships.
Conclusions
Institutional leaders assisted clinicians in dealing with stressful practices in beneficial ways but fell short of envisaging systems approaches that improve practice organization to encourage humanistic care
How Physicians Draw Satisfaction and Overcome Barriers in their Practices: “It Sustains Me”
Objective
Major reorganizations of medical practice today challenge physicians’ ability to deliver compassionate care. We sought to understand how physicians who completed an intensive faculty development program in medical humanism sustain their humanistic practices.
Methods
Program completers from 8 U.S. medical schools wrote reflections in answer to two open-ended questions addressing their personal motivations and the barriers that impeded their humanistic practice and teaching. Reflections were qualitatively analyzed using the constant comparative method.
Results
Sixty-eight physicians (74% response rate) submitted reflections. Motivating factors included: 1) identification with humanistic values; 2) providing care that they or their family would want; 3) connecting to patients; 4) passing on values through role modelling; 5) being in the moment. Inhibiting factors included: 1) time, 2) stress, 3) culture, and 4) episodic burnout.
Conclusions
Determination to live by one’s values, embedded within a strong professional identity, allowed study participants to alleviate, but not resolve, the barriers. Collaborative action to address organizational impediments was endorsed but found to be lacking.
Practice implications
Fostering fully mature professional development among physicians will require new skills and opportunities that reinforce time-honored values while simultaneously partnering with others to nurture, sustain and improve patient care by addressing system issues
Intervenir sobre la cultura organizacional: ¿qué aspectos se pueden considerar?
La cultura organizacional (co) es un macroconstructo que involucra una gran variedad de componentes y funciones organizacionales (Warner, 2014). Reyes y Moros (2018) señalan que tiene su origen en el estudio realizado en Hawthorne por Elton Mayo y otros investigadores de la Escuela de las Relaciones Humanas de la AdministraciĂłn, en el que buscaban identificar la influencia de las condiciones fĂsicas y ambientales en el desempeño individual. Para Reyes y Moros (2018), la co se siguiĂł desarrollando en los años setenta con Pettigrew, para ser entendida como un sistema de significados que tanto pĂşblica como colectivamente es aceptado para operar en un tiempo y por un grupo determinado. Los autores la definen como “… un sistema de significados compartidos por los miembros de la organizaciĂłn, los cuales son el resultado de una construcciĂłn social constituida a travĂ©s de sĂmbolos y como tal deben ser interpretados”1a ediciĂł
Supporting Learner Social Relationships with Enculturated Pedagogal Agents
Embodied conversational agents put a “human” touch on intelligent tutoring systems by using conversation to support learning. When considering instruction in interpersonal domains, such as intercultural negotiation, the development of an interpersonal relationship with one’s pedagogical agent may play a significant role in learning. However, there is conflicting evidence in the literature both regarding the ability of agents to cultivate social relationships with humans, and their effect on learning. In this dissertation, I present a model of social dialog designed to affect learners’ interpersonal relations with virtual agents, a development process for creating social dialog, and empirical studies showing that this dialog has significant effects on learners’ perceptions of the agents and negotiation performance.
In early work, I explicitly prompted learners to have social goals for the interaction. I found that while students who reported social goals for interacting with the agents had significantly higher learning gains, explicit prompting was not effective at inducing these goals. I thus focused on implicit influence of learner goals, developing a model of social instructional dialog (SID) that integrates conversational strategies that are theorized to produce interpersonal effects on relationships. In two subsequent studies, an agent with the SID model engendered greater feelings of entitativity, shared perspective, and trust, suggesting that the model improved learner social relationships with the agent. Importantly, these effects transferred to other agents encountered later in the environment. The social dialog condition also made fewer errors and achieved more negotiation objectives in a subsequent negotiation than a control group, evidence that the improved social relationship lead to better negotiation performance. These findings regarding interpersonal relationships with agents contribute to the literature on learner-agent interactions, and can guide the future development of agents in social environments.</p
Investigating the Effects of Social Goals in a Negotiation Game with Virtual Humans
Abstract. Educational games may be particularly suited to teaching social learning skills with virtual humans. We investigate the importance of social goals and engaging social interactions in learning from such games. In one experiment, students played a cultural negotiation game with an explicit social goal or only negotiation task goals. While the group without the explicit social goal learned significantly more, students who reported having social goals in a manipulation check learned the most. In future work, we will develop an intervention built into a virtual learning environment to implicitly scaffold social goals