Designing Adaptive Instruction For Teams: A Meta-Analysis
Keywords
Adaptive instruction; Collaborative learning; Collective; Collective training; Taskwork; Team learning; Team performance; Team satisfaction; Team tutoring; Team viability; Team-based instruction; Teamwork
Abstract
The goal of this research was the development of a practical architecture for the computer-based tutoring of teams. This article examines the relationship of team behaviors as antecedents to successful team performance and learning during adaptive instruction guided by Intelligent Tutoring Systems (ITSs). Adaptive instruction is a training or educational experience tailored by artificially-intelligent, computer-based tutors with the goal of optimizing learner outcomes (e.g., knowledge and skill acquisition, performance, enhanced retention, accelerated learning, or transfer of skills from instructional environments to work environments). The core contribution of this research was the identification of behavioral markers associated with the antecedents of team performance and learning thus enabling the development and refinement of teamwork models in ITS architectures. Teamwork focuses on the coordination, cooperation, and communication among individuals to achieve a shared goal. For ITSs to optimally tailor team instruction, tutors must have key insights about both the team and the learners on that team. To aid the modeling of teams, we examined the literature to evaluate the relationship of teamwork behaviors (e.g., communication, cooperation, coordination, cognition, leadership/coaching, and conflict) with team outcomes (learning, performance, satisfaction, and viability) as part of a large-scale meta-analysis of the ITS, team training, and team performance literature. While ITSs have been used infrequently to instruct teams, the goal of this meta-analysis make team tutoring more ubiquitous by: identifying significant relationships between team behaviors and effective performance and learning outcomes; developing instructional guidelines for team tutoring based on these relationships; and applying these team tutoring guidelines to the Generalized Intelligent Framework for Tutoring (GIFT), an open source architecture for authoring, delivering, managing, and evaluating adaptive instructional tools and methods. In doing this, we have designed a domain-independent framework for the adaptive instruction of teams.
Publication Date
6-1-2018
Publication Title
International Journal of Artificial Intelligence in Education
Volume
28
Issue
2
Number of Pages
225-264
Document Type
Article
Personal Identifier
scopus
DOI Link
https://doi.org/10.1007/s40593-017-0146-z
Copyright Status
Unknown
Socpus ID
85046267535 (Scopus)
Source API URL
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/85046267535
STARS Citation
Sottilare, Robert A.; Shawn Burke, C.; Salas, Eduardo; Sinatra, Anne M.; and Johnston, Joan H., "Designing Adaptive Instruction For Teams: A Meta-Analysis" (2018). Scopus Export 2015-2019. 9178.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/scopus2015/9178