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Figure 2. Mathematics Students’ Preferred Methods and Resources for Study. Abbreviations are as for Figure 1.
Figures 1 and 2 above show some interesting contrasts between the groups.
Aeronautical engineering students seem to have a preference for more traditional
learning resources, namely lecture notes, problem sheets and textbooks, whereas the
Civil engineering students mainly preferred on-line resources. The mathematics
students seemed to favour a mixture of on-line materials and lecture notes and problem
sheets, with none claiming to make extensive use of traditional text books. MathsAid
seemed to be more popular with second year (Level 5) students, possibly because they
were more familiar with it being available. Overall, On-Line Resources (of various
types) were popular with the majority of the students surveyed, with only 18 out of the
72 claiming not to make much use of them, compared with only 5 out of the 72 who
claimed to rely primarily on traditional text books. (This contrasts with the findings of
[3] where only 23% of the respondents in 2015 claimed to make regular use of web-
based resources.) These findings strengthen the argument for investing in the
development of high-quality, easy to use and extend on-line resources for the teaching
and learning of mathematics in degree level studies, covering many topic areas and
providing practice examples which offer useful, meaningful feedback to their student
users. Further statistical analysis of the participants’ responses – including those to the
other questions is currently underway.
4. CalculEng – our on-line tutorial tool for helping students learn Calculus
As discussed above, we have identified a need for high quality tutorial resources to
help students learn and practice mathematical topics such as differential and integral
calculus. Ideally, such materials should offer students the opportunity to enter their
answers in standard mathematical notation (not just allowing multiple choice or short
numerical answers), check the answers for consistency both with the “correct” model
solution and with anticipated “common error” answers, and then provide the student
meaningful feedback which will assist his or her learning of the topic or technique. As
noted in section 1, on-line tutorial exercises which do not provide feedback on a
student’s answers will make it hard for the student to identify where, how or why they
made mistakes. This will impair “feed forward” progress towards them fully
understanding and mastering the topics and techniques being learned. These are all
things which we attempt to address in our CalculEng system.
M.Davis etal. /Developing“Smart”TutorialTools toAssist
StudentsLearnCalculus232
Intelligent Environments 2019
Workshop Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Intelligent Environments
- Titel
- Intelligent Environments 2019
- Untertitel
- Workshop Proceedings of the 15th International Conference on Intelligent Environments
- Autoren
- Andrés Muñoz
- Sofia Ouhbi
- Wolfgang Minker
- Loubna Echabbi
- Miguel Navarro-CĂa
- Verlag
- IOS Press BV
- Datum
- 2019
- Sprache
- deutsch
- Lizenz
- CC BY-NC 4.0
- ISBN
- 978-1-61499-983-6
- Abmessungen
- 16.0 x 24.0 cm
- Seiten
- 416
- Kategorie
- Tagungsbände