IDENTIFYING ROTE LEARNING AND THE SUPPORTING EFFECTS OF HINTS IN DRILLS

Whenever students use any drilling system the question arises how much of their learning is meaningful learning, which emphasises understanding and the transferability of prior knowledge, and how much is memorisation through repetition or rote learning. Although both types of learning have their pla...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stefansson, Gunnar, Jonsdottir, Anna Helga, Sigurdsson, GG, Bergsdottir, I.L.
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://zenodo.org/record/6497475
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6497475
Description
Summary:Whenever students use any drilling system the question arises how much of their learning is meaningful learning, which emphasises understanding and the transferability of prior knowledge, and how much is memorisation through repetition or rote learning. Although both types of learning have their place in an educational system it is important to be able to distinguish between these two approaches to learning and identify options which can dislodge students from rote learning and motivate them towards meaningful learning. The tutor-web is an online drilling system, which has been used by thousands of students from Iceland to Kenya. The design aim of the system is to promote meaningful learning rather than evaluation. This is done by presenting students with multiple-choice questions which are selected randomly but nevertheless linked to the students’ performance to ensure that students are appropriately challenged. The questions themselves can be generated for a specific topic by drawing correct and incorrect answers from a collection associated with a general problem statement or heading. With this generating process students may see the same question heading twice but be presented with all new answer options or a mixture of new and old answer options. Data from an introductory university course on probability theory and statistics, taught using the tutorweb during COVID-19, are analysed to separate rote learning from meaningful learning. The analyses show that considerable non-rote learning takes place, but even with fairly large question databases, students’ performance is considerably better when they are presented with an answer option they have seen before. An element of rote learning is thus clearly exhibited but a deeper learning is also demonstrated. The item database has been seeded with occasional hints such that some questions contain fairly detailed clues, which should cue the students towards the correct answer. This ties in with the issue of meaningful learning versus rote learning since the hope is ...