This document discusses three studies examining how students interact with and solve ill-structured problems presented with either a hierarchical or heterarchical web-based structure. The first exploratory study found that the heterarchical structure led to more collaboration and positive perceptions of organization. The second case study found problem solutions in response to the heterarchical structure were more comprehensive and viable. The third experimental study similarly found that exploration of the heterarchical structure was more comprehensive and problem solutions became more expert-like. However, hierarchical structure initial led to higher quality initial solutions. Overall, the heterarchical structure better supported expert-like problem solving but clearer structure from hierarchical also had benefits initially. More research is needed on user experience design of ill-
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Web-Based Representations of Ill-Structured Problems: Analysis and Implications for Practice
1. Web-Based Representations of
Ill-Structured Problems: Analysis
and Implications for Practice
Nada Dabbagh
Professor, Learning Technologies
George Mason University
Virginia, U.S.A.
PBL 2016, Sao Paulo
6. ISP Representation
How does one determine the degree and type of structure with
which to arrange information for an ISP, and does it matter?
Does problem structure impact student learning?
Does problem structure impact problem-solving?
Does problem structure impact knowledge assembly?
Examine how students interact with two types of ISP
representations, hierarchical and heterarchical web-based
designs, in order to better understand problem structure
User Experience (UXD)
7.
8. Hierarchical versus Heterarchical
Web-Based Designs
Hierarchical design:
tree-like, top-down structure
resulting in several navigation levels or layers
content generally organized into logical sections often by
major topic area
Heterarchical design:
network-like, relational, conceptually indexed structure
embedded links are sprawled throughout the content,
resulting in an unstructured navigation path with random
links jumping from one topic to another (referential access)
Depth versus Breadth
Topical versus Contextual
9. ISP Used in this Research
Design Problem/Dilemma – Medical Malpractice
Authentic, ambiguous, multiple stakeholders, incomplete information,
emergent, elusive
Concerning the issue of “informed consent” prior to surgery:
The informed consent problem was used in an ID context:
Instructional Design (ID) is a dynamic process of problem
understanding and problem solution
ID cases are archetypal examples of ill-structured problems
Students are responsible for designing instruction and assessment
that legally verifies that patients were fully “informed”
ISP was used in a PBL environment
17. First Study - Exploratory
7 participants – 2 groups
Hierarchical (H) Design of ISP:
Exploration was found to be more comprehensive in terms of the #links
visited/revisited, # of unique links visited, and total # of interactions generated
Heterarchical (R) Design of ISP:
Average time spent on a page was 1.5 times the average time spent on a page
in the H case design
Evidence of more collaboration between group members (97% versus 86% of
the decisions were group-based)
Group problem solving strategy was clearly one of discussion and reasoning
through the problem information
Perceptions of structure in terms of organization of links, resource information,
and navigation, were overall more positive
Both H&R: Perceptions of ill-structuredness, authenticity, meaningfulness,
and relevance of the learning task was equal in both groups
18. Second Study – Case Study
14 participants – 4 groups
Problem solutions developed in response to the heterarchical (R) design
were more cogent and viable than problem solutions developed in
response to hierarchical design
explicit links among multiple factors in the case
focused on building from what is known
recommendations described in tentative terms and subject to change as
additional information becomes available
explicit consideration of implementation and/or effects of recommendations
Problem solutions developed in response to heterarchical (R) design
provided evidence of a heuristic problem-solving process facilitating
the identification of an expert-like solution to the case and the articulation
of learners’ understanding and application of grounded and engaging
instructional designs
19. Third Study – Experimental Design
43 participants – 8 groups
How does team exploration (information seeking behavior) in the
heterarchical (R) ISP design compare to team exploration in the
hierarchical (H) hypermedia case design?
How do team-based heterarchical (R) ISP design solutions compare
with team-based hierarchical (H) ISP design solutions? Are the
heterarchical ISP solutions more expert-like, comprehensive, cogent,
and viable than the hierarchical ISP solutions?
Did the online discourse reveal differences in participants’ problem
solving behaviors (e.g., novice vs. expert-like) between teams that
interacted with the heterarchical (R) ISP design and teams that
interacted with the hierarchical (H) ISP design?
20. Results
Exploration, information seeking behavior:
team exploration in the R case design was more comprehensive (covered
more case content) and decisive (minimal uncertainty with respect to the
usefulness of the visited links to solving the case)
average time spent on a page by the R teams was 2 minutes versus 4.75
minutes for the H teams which explains why exploration was overall more
comprehensive in the R case design
Research suggests that user interaction with R case designs requires
more cognitive effort in terms of navigation decision making resulting in
more time spent on a page and hence less links visited overall;
however, this was not the case in this study
The results of this study were not consistent with the results of the first
study with respect to number of links visited (comprehensiveness) and
time spent on a page
21. Results
Problem solving behavior/design solutions:
Initial/draft ISP solution means were higher for the hierarchical (H)
teams, however, this trend was reversed for the final ISP solutions
heterarchical (R) ISP interactions and solutions demonstrated more
expert-like
Users interacting with a simplified, externalized, or highly organized
hypermedia navigation structure, as is the case in the hierarchical (H)
ISP design, may initially perceive the learning task as well-defined,
while students or users interacting with a more contextual (natural) or
unstructured hypermedia navigation structure, as is the case in the
heterarchical (R) ISP design, may initially perceive the learning task as
ill-structured or ill-defined
22. Conclusions
Collaborative decision making and problem solving are a staple of PBL and
interactions involving these processes are becoming largely technology
supported and mediated through online learning technologies
The results of this series of studies that examined the effects of problem
representation of ISP or cases on student collaborative information seeking and
problem solving behaviors seem to support the tension that exists in CSCL
research (Computer Supported Collaborative Learning)
While CSCL researchers argue that group tasks should be complex and ill
structured to maximize group interactions, recent CSCL research is increasingly
tempering this position and arguing that clearer and greater structure is needed
to scaffold collaborative tasks and problems
More research on UX (User Experience) as this relates to the design of
technology supported ISP representations and CSCL in PBL