Photo of a teacher teaching online from a classroom
A new 海角乱伦社区-led study found that an automated tool improved instructors鈥 use of a practice known as uptake, where teachers acknowledge, reiterate, and build on students鈥 contributions. (Photo: Getty Images)

Feedback from an AI-driven tool improves teaching, 海角乱伦社区-led research finds

The first study of its kind shows that a tool providing automated feedback improves instructors鈥 communication practices and student satisfaction.
May 8, 2023
By Carrie Spector

Artificial intelligence is rapidly transforming education, in both worrisome and beneficial ways. On the positive side of the ledger, new research shows how AI can help improve the way instructors engage with their students, by way of a cutting-edge tool that provides feedback on their interactions in class.

A new 海角乱伦社区-led , published May 8 in the peer-reviewed journal Educational Evaluation and Policy Analysis, found that an automated feedback tool improved instructors鈥 use of a practice known as uptake, where teachers acknowledge, reiterate, and build on students鈥 contributions. The findings also provided evidence that, among students, the tool improved their rate of completing assignments and their overall satisfaction with the course.

For instructors looking to improve their practice, the tool offers a low-cost complement to conventional classroom observation 鈥 one that doesn鈥檛 require an instructional coach or other expert to watch the teacher in action and compile a set of recommendations.

鈥淲e know from past research that timely, specific feedback can improve teaching, but it鈥檚 just not scalable or feasible for someone to sit in a teacher鈥檚 classroom and give feedback every time,鈥 said Dora Demszky, an assistant professor at 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education (GSE) and lead author of the study. 鈥淲e wanted to see whether an automated tool could support teachers鈥 professional development in a scalable and cost-effective way, and this is the first study to show that it does.鈥

Photo of GSE Assistant Professor Dora Demszky

GSE Assistant Professor Dora Demszky

Promoting effective teaching practices

Recognizing that existing methods for providing personalized feedback require significant resources, Demszky and colleagues set out to create a low-cost alternative. They leveraged recent advances in natural language processing (NLP) 鈥 a branch of AI that helps computers read and interpret human language 鈥 to develop a tool that could analyze transcripts of a class session to identify conversational patterns and deliver consistent, automated feedback.

For this study, they focused on identifying teachers鈥 uptake of student contributions. 鈥淯ptake is key to making students feel heard, and as a practice it鈥檚 been linked to greater student achievement,鈥 said Demszky. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 also widely considered difficult for teachers to improve.鈥

The researchers trained the tool, called M-Powering Teachers (the M stands for machine, as in machine learning), to detect the extent to which a teacher鈥檚 response is specific to what a student has said, which would show that the teacher understood and built on the student鈥檚 idea. The tool can also provide feedback on teachers鈥 questioning practices, such as posing questions that elicited a significant response from students, and the ratio of teacher/student talk time.

The research team put the tool to work in the Spring 2021 session of 海角乱伦社区鈥檚 , a free online course now in its third year. In the five-week program, based on 海角乱伦社区鈥檚 popular introductory computer science course, hundreds of volunteer instructors teach basic programming to learners worldwide, in small sections with a 1:10 teacher-student ratio.

Screenshot of sample feedback provided to instructors

The M-Powering Teachers tool provides feedback with examples of dialogue from the class to illustrate supportive conversational patterns. (Click on image to enlarge)

Code in Place instructors come from all sorts of backgrounds, from undergrads who鈥檝e recently taken the course themselves to professional computer programmers working in the industry. Enthusiastic as they are to introduce beginners to the world of coding, many instructors approach the opportunity with little or no prior teaching experience.

The volunteer instructors received basic training, clear lesson goals, and session outlines to prepare for their role, and many welcomed the chance to receive automated input on their sessions, said study co-author , an assistant professor of computer science education at 海角乱伦社区 and co-founder of Code in Place.

鈥淲e make such a big deal in education about the importance of timely feedback for students, but when do teachers get that kind of feedback?鈥 he said. 鈥淢aybe the principal will come in and sit in on your class, which seems terrifying. It鈥檚 much more comfortable to engage with feedback that鈥檚 not coming from your principal, and you can get it not just after years of practice but from your first day on the job.鈥

Instructors received their feedback from the tool through an app within a few days after each class, so they could reflect on it before the next session. Presented in a colorful, easy-to-read format, the feedback used positive, nonjudgmental language and included specific examples of dialogue from their class to illustrate supportive conversational patterns.

The researchers found that, on average, instructors who reviewed their feedback subsequently increased their use of uptake and questioning, with the most significant changes taking place in the third week of the course. Student learning and satisfaction with the course also increased among those whose instructors received feedback, compared with the control group. Code in Place doesn鈥檛 administer an end-of-course exam, so the researchers used the completion rates of optional assignments and course surveys to measure student learning and satisfaction.

Testing in other settings

Subsequent research by Demszky with one of the study鈥檚 coauthors, Jing Liu, PhD 鈥18, studied the use of the tool among instructors who worked one-on-one with high school students in an online mentoring program called . The researchers, who will present their  in July at the 2023 Learning at Scale conference, found that on average the tool improved mentors鈥 uptake of student contributions by 10%, reduced their talk time by 5%, and improved students鈥 experience with the program as well as their relative optimism about their academic future.

Demszky is currently conducting a study of the tool鈥檚 use for in-person, K-12 school classrooms, and she noted the challenge of generating the high-quality transcription she was able to obtain from a virtual setting. 鈥淭he audio quality from the classroom is not great, and separating voices is not easy,鈥 she said. 鈥淣atural language processing can do so much once you have the transcripts 鈥 but you need good transcripts.鈥

She stressed that the tool was not designed for surveillance or evaluation purposes, but to support teachers鈥 professional development by giving them an opportunity to reflect on their practices. She likened it to a fitness tracker, providing information for its users鈥 own benefit.

The tool also was not designed to replace human feedback but to complement other professional development resources, she said.

Along with Dora Demszky, Jing Liu, and Chris Piech, the study was co-authored by Dan Jurafsky, a professor of linguistics and of computer science at 海角乱伦社区, and Heather C. Hill, a professor at the Harvard Graduate School of Education.


Faculty mentioned in this article: Dora Demszky