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The Promises and Pitfalls of Using Language Models to Measure Instruction Quality in Education

Assessing instruction quality is a fundamental component of any improvement efforts in the education system. However, traditional manual assessments are expensive, subjective, and heavily dependent on observers’ expertise and idiosyncratic factors, preventing teachers from getting timely and frequent feedback. Different from prior research that focuses on low-inference instructional practices, this paper presents the first study that leverages Natural Language Processing (NLP) techniques to assess multiple high-inference instructional practices in two distinct educational settings: in-person K-12 classrooms and simulated performance tasks for pre-service teachers. This is also the first study that applies NLP to measure a teaching practice that has been demonstrated to be particularly effective for students with special needs. We confront two challenges inherent in NLP-based instructional analysis, including noisy and long input data and highly skewed distributions of human ratings. Our results suggest that pretrained Language Models (PLMs) demonstrate performances comparable to the agreement level of human raters for variables that are more discrete and require lower inference, but their efficacy diminishes with more complex teaching practices. Interestingly, using only teachers’ utterances as input yields strong results for student-centered variables, alleviating common concerns over the difficulty of collecting and transcribing high-quality student speech data in in-person teaching settings. Our findings highlight both the potential and the limitations of current NLP techniques in the education domain, opening avenues for further exploration.

Education level
Document Object Identifier (DOI)
10.26300/w37n-xy37

EdWorkingPaper suggested citation:

Xu, Paiheng, Jing Liu, Nathan Jones, Julie Cohen, and Wei Ai. (). The Promises and Pitfalls of Using Language Models to Measure Instruction Quality in Education. (EdWorkingPaper: 24-948). Retrieved from Annenberg Institute at Brown University: https://doi.org/10.26300/w37n-xy37

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