Modeling One-on-one Online Tutoring Discourse using an Accountable Talk Framework

Abstract

The National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (NCTM) has been emphasizing the importance of teachers’ pedagogical communication as part of mathematical teaching and learning for decades. Specifically, NCTM has provided guidance on how teachers can foster mathematical communication that positively impacts student learning. A teacher may have different academic goals towards what needs to be achieved in a classroom, which require a variety of discourse-based tools that allow students to engage fully in mathematical thinking and reasoning. Accountable or academically productive talk is one such approach for classroom discourse that may ensure that the discussions are coherent, purposeful and productive. This paper discusses the use of a transformer model for classifying classroom talk moves based on the accountable talk framework. We investigate the extent to which the classroom Accountable Talk framework can be successfully applied to one-onone online mathematics tutoring environments. We further propose a framework adapted from Accountable Talk, but more specifically aligned to one-on-one online tutoring. The model performance for the proposed framework is evaluated and compared with a small sample of expert coding. The results obtained from the proposed framework for one-on-one tutoring are promising and improve classification performance of the talk moves for our dataset.

Authors

Renu Balyan
SUNY College at Old Westbury
balyanr@oldwestbury.edu

Tracy Arner
Arizona State University
tarner@asu.edu

Karen Taylor
Arizona State University
karnetaylor.sb@gmail.com

Jinnie Shin
University of Florida
jinnie.shin@coe.ufl.edu

Michelle Banawan
Arizona State University
mbanawan@asu.edu

Walter L. Leite
University of Florida
walter.leite@coe.ufl.edu

Danielle S. McNamara
Arizona State University
dsmcnamara1@gmail.com