Home page News Detail

The content on this page was translated automatically.

Back
11/01/2024

Article by Florian Weber, Thiemo Wambsganß and Matthias Söllner published in the British Journal of Educational Technology (BJET)

The British Journal of Educational Technology (BJET) has published the paper "Enhancing legal writing skills: The impact of formative feedback in a hybrid intelligence learning environment" by Florian Weber, Thiemo Wambsganß and Matthias Söllner.

BJET is considered one of the leading publications on educational technology. BJET achieved an impact factor of 6.7 in 2023, placing it in the top quartile in the education and educational research category at 6/756.

Abstract: Recent developments in artificial intelligence (AI) have significantly influenced educational technologies, reshaping the teaching and learning landscape. However, the notion of fully automating the teaching process remains contentious. This paper explores the concept of hybrid intelligence (HI), which emphasizes the synergistic collaboration between AI and humans to optimize learning outcomes. Despite the potential of AI-enhanced learning systems, their application in a human-AI collaboration system often fails to meet anticipated standards, and there needs to be more empirical evidence showcasing their effectiveness. To address this gap, this study investigates whether formative feedback in a HI learning environment helps law students learn from their errors and write more structured and persuasive legal texts. We conducted a field experiment in a law course to analyze the impact of formative feedback on the exam results of 43 law students, as well as on the writer (students), the writing product and the writing process. In the control group, students received feedback conforming to the legal common practice, where they solved legal problems and subsequently received general feedback from a lecturer based on a sample solution. Students in the treatment group were provided with formative feedback that specifically targeted their individual errors, thereby stimulating internal cognitive processes within the students. Our investigation revealed that participants who were provided with formative feedback rooted in their errors within structured and persuasive legal writing outperformed the control group in producing qualitative, better legal text during an exam. Furthermore, the analyzed qualitative student statements also suggest that formative feedback promotes students' self-efficacy and self-regulated learning. Our findings indicate that integrating formative feedback rooted in individual errors enhances students' legal writing skills. This underscores the hybrid nature of AI, empowering students to identify their errors and improve in a more self-regulated manner.

DOI: https: //doi.org/10.1111/bjet.13529

Link to the article: https: //bera-journals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/bjet.13529