Making sense of student feedback and engagement using artificial intelligence
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14742/ajet.8903Keywords:
student engagement, student experience, online engagement, artificial intelligence, natural language processing, higher education, regional universityAbstract
Making sense of student feedback and engagement is important for informing pedagogical decision-making and broader strategies related to student retention and success in higher education courses. Although learning analytics and other strategies are employed within courses to understand student engagement, the interpretation of data for larger data sets is more challenging and rarely pursued. This is concerning as data offers the potential for critical insights into engagement behaviour and the value students place on engagement. Artificial intelligence (AI) offers a revolutionary ability to make sense of data, with capacity for prediction and classification, by consuming vast amounts of structured and unstructured data sets. This paper reports on how AI methodologies (specifically, deep learning and natural language processing) were used to leverage labelled student feedback in terms of online engagement in five courses in a regional Australian university. This paper reinforces the value of AI as a viable and scalable multilayered analysis tool for analysing and interpreting student feedback, particularly for categorising student responses as to the types of engagement that they most valued to support their learning. The paper concludes with a discussion of suggested further refinement, including how the AI-derived data may add insights for informing pedagogical practice.
Implications for practice or policy:
- AI offers an ability to make sense of large data sets in higher education courses.
- Teachers can use student feedback data categorised into types of engagement by AI to support reflection on what students value in their courses.
- Educators and key stakeholders can use the insights AI analysed data offers for informing pedagogical practice and decision-making in higher education to enhance student experiences.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Christopher Dann, Petrea Redmond, Melissa Fanshawe, Alice Brown, Seyum Getenet, Thanveer Shaik, Xiaohui Tao, Linda Galligan, Yan Li
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