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Journal ArticleDOI

Gender Differences in the Use and Benefit of Advanced Learning Technologies for Mathematics.

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TLDR
For instance, the authors found that female students were more receptive than male students to seeking and accepting help provided by the tutoring system and to spending time seeing the hints; thus, they had a consistent general trend to benefit more from it, especially when affective learning companions were present.
Abstract
We provide evidence of persistent gender effects for students using advanced adaptive technology while learning mathematics. This technology improves each gender’s learning and affective predispositions toward mathematics, but specific features in the software help either female or male students. Gender differences were seen in the students’ style of use of the system, motivational goals, affective needs, and cognitive/affective benefits, as well as the impact of affective interventions involving pedagogical agents. We describe 4 studies, with hundreds of students in public schools over several years, which suggest that technology responses should probably be customized to each gender. This article shows differential results before, during, and after the use of adaptive tutoring software, indicating that digital tutoring systems can be an important supplement to mathematics classrooms but that male and female students should be addressed differently. Female students were more receptive than male students to seeking and accepting help provided by the tutoring system and to spending time seeing the hints; thus, they had a consistent general trend to benefit more from it, especially when affective learning companions were present. In addition, female students expressed positively valenced emotions most often and exhibited more productive behaviors when exposed to female characters; these affective pedagogical agents encouraged effort and perseverance. This was not the case for male students, who had more positive outcomes when no learning companion was present and their worst affective and cognitive outcomes when the female character was present.

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Citations
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Comparing virtual and location-based augmented reality mobile learning: emotions and learning outcomes

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared undergraduate students' emotions and learning outcomes during a guided historical tour using mobile AR applications, and found that learners were able to effectively and enjoyably learn about historical differences between past and present historical locations by contextualizing their visual representations, and that two mobile AR apps were effective both in and outside of the laboratory.
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Self-regulation and gender within a game-based learning environment.

TL;DR: This paper examined how self-regulated learning (SRL) and gender influences performance in an educational game for 8th-grade students (N = 130), which is an immersive, inquiry-based, narrative-centered learning environment featuring a microbiology science mystery aligned with 8th grade science curriculum.
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The appearance effect

TL;DR: Investigating if and under which circumstances a virtual tutor influences the students' exam performance, interest in the course material and their enjoyment during learning found appearance features of tutoring agents in e-learning independently influence the student's motivation and performance.
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Developing Emotion-Aware, Advanced Learning Technologies: A Taxonomy of Approaches and Features

TL;DR: Theoretically, the taxonomy is primarily informed by the control-value theory of achievement emotions and its assumptions about the relationship between distal and proximal antecedents and the elicitation and regulation of emotion.
References
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TL;DR: In this paper, Cole and Scribner discuss the role of play in children's development and play as a tool and symbol in the development of perception and attention in a prehistory of written language.
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Journal ArticleDOI

A social-cognitive approach to motivation and personality

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Related Papers (5)
Trending Questions (2)
What are some ways in which technology can be used to improve emotional engagement in math learning?

The paper discusses that technology can improve emotional engagement in math learning by using affective pedagogical agents, such as female characters, to encourage effort and perseverance for female students.

How can technological proficiency be improved in students in gender?

The provided paper does not directly address how technological proficiency can be improved in students of different genders. The paper focuses on gender differences in the use and benefit of advanced learning technologies for mathematics.