Affiliation:
1. University of Tübingen, Tübingen, Germany
Abstract
Foreign language teaching achieves best learning outcomes when
individual differences of learners are taken into account. While it is
difficult for teachers to support internal differentiation in the classroom,
digital tools can adaptively propose individual learning paths through
activities so that students can practice with appropriately challenging
exercises. But how can sufficiently varied, systematically parametrized
exercises be provided to enable a system to match them to individual learner
needs? We present an approach for high-variability exercise generation that
transforms a single specification into a multitude of exercises varying in
complexity. The approach is currently being evaluated in a randomized
controlled study in regular German seventh grade English classes,
facilitating a systematic empirical exploration of adaptive exercise
complexity in relation to learning outcomes.