posted on 2008-07-01, 00:00authored byRon J. C. M. Salden, Vincent A. W. M. M. Aleven, Alexander Renkl, Rolf Schwonke
The current research investigates a combination of two
instructional approaches, tutored problem solving and
worked-examples. Tutored problem solving with automated
tutors has proven to be an effective instructional method.
Worked-out examples have been shown to be an effective
complement to untutored problem solving, but it is largely
unknown whether they are an effective complement to
tutored problem solving. Further, while computer-based
learning environments offer the possibility of adaptively
transitioning from examples to problems while tailoring to an
individual learner, the effectiveness of such machine-adapted
example fading is largely unstudied. To address these
research questions, one lab and one classroom experiment
were conducted. Both studies compared a standard Cognitive
Tutor with two example-enhanced Cognitive Tutors, in which
the fading of worked-out examples occurred either fixed or
adaptively. Results indicate that the adaptive fading of
worked-out examples leads to higher transfer performance on
delayed post-tests than the other two methods.