When students can choose easy, medium, or hard homework problems
Author(s)
Teodorescu, Raluca E.; Seaton, Daniel; Cardamone, Carolin; Rayyan, Saif; Abbott, Jonathan E.; Barrantes, Analia; Pawl, Andrew; Pritchard, David E.; ... Show more Show less
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We investigate student-chosen, multi-level homework in our Integrated Learning Environment for Mechanics [1] built using the LON-CAPA [2] open-source learning system. Multi-level refers to problems categorized as easy, medium, and hard. Problem levels were determined a priori based on the knowledge needed to solve them [3]. We analyze these problems using three measures: time-per-problem, LON-CAPA difficulty, and item difficulty measured by item response theory. Our analysis of student behavior in this environment suggests that time-per-problem is strongly dependent on problem category, unlike either score-based measures. We also found trends in student choice of problems, overall effort, and efficiency across the student population. Allowing students choice in problem solving seems to improve their motivation; 70% of students worked additional problems for which no credit was given.
Date issued
2012Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Mechanical Engineering; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Physics; Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Office of Digital LearningJournal
AIP Conference Proceedings
Publisher
American Institute of Physics (AIP)
Citation
Teodorescu, Raluca E. et al. “When Students Can Choose Easy, Medium, or Hard Homework Problems.” 2012. 81–84. ©2012 American Institute of Physics
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
0094-243X
1551-7616