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Early Prediction of Student Performance in a Health Data Science MOOC

Authors :
Rohani, Narjes
Gal, Kobi
Gallagher, Michael
Manataki, Areti
Source :
International Educational Data Mining Society. 2023.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs) make high-quality learning accessible to students from all over the world. On the other hand, they are known to exhibit low student performance and high dropout rates. Early prediction of student performance in MOOCs can help teachers intervene in time in order to improve learners' future performance. This is particularly important in healthcare courses, given the acute shortages of healthcare staff and the urgent need to train data-literate experts in the healthcare field. In this paper, we analysed a health data science MOOC taken by over 3,000 students. We developed a novel three-step pipeline to predict student performance in the early stages of the course. In the first step, we inferred the transitions between students' low-level actions from their clickstream interactions. In the second step, the transitions were fed into Artificial Neural Network (ANN) that predicted student performance. In the final step, we used two explanation methods to interpret the ANN result. Using this approach, we were able to predict learners' final performance in the course with an AUC ranging from 83% to 91%. We found that students who interacted predominately with lab, project, and discussion materials outperformed students who interacted predominately with lectures and quizzes. We used the DiCE counterfactual method to automatically suggest simple changes to the learning behaviour of low- and moderate-performance students in the course that could potentially improve their performance. Our method can be used by instructors to help identify and support struggling students during the course. [For the complete proceedings, see ED630829.]

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
International Educational Data Mining Society
Publication Type :
Conference
Accession number :
ED630840
Document Type :
Speeches/Meeting Papers<br />Reports - Research