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September 17, 2012Computerized TutorsNeil Heffernan was listening to his fiancée, Cristina Lindquist, tutor one of her students in mathematics when he had an idea. Heffernan was a graduate student in computer science, and by this point -- the summer of 1997 -- he had been working for two years with researchers at Carnegie Mellon University on developing computer software to help students improve their skills. But he had come to believe that the programs did little to assist their users. They were built on elaborate theories of the student mind -- attempts to simulate the learning brain. Then it dawned on him: what was missing from the programs was the interventions teachers made to promote and accelerate learning. Why not model a computer program on a human tutor like Lindquist?Posted by Jim Zellmer at September 17, 2012 2:58 AM Subscribe to this site via RSS/Atom: Newsletter signup | Send us your ideas Comments
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