Proceedings of the Fifth Annual ACM Conference on Learning at Scale 2018
DOI: 10.1145/3231644.3231653
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Supporting answerers with feedback in social Q&A

Abstract: Prior research has examined the use of Social Question and Answer (Q&A) websites for answer and help seeking. However, the potential for these websites to support domain learning has not yet been realized. Helping users write effective answers can be beneficial for subject area learning for both answerers and the recipients of answers. In this study, we examine the utility of crowdsourced, criteria-based feedback for answerers on a student-centered Q&A website, Brainly.com. In an experiment with 55 users, we c… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…In the SQA community, users can vote for, agree with and like, and give feedback on or approve of answers. They can also make comments to express their doubts, agreement or opposition or provide additional materials to supplement the content, a process through which users can collaboratively learn from the feedback (Costa et al, 2017;Frens et al, 2018;Oeldorf-Hirsch and Sundar, 2015). Two forms of feedbackapproval and collaborationtogether with the action of publishing answers, shape the production of SQA community content.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In the SQA community, users can vote for, agree with and like, and give feedback on or approve of answers. They can also make comments to express their doubts, agreement or opposition or provide additional materials to supplement the content, a process through which users can collaboratively learn from the feedback (Costa et al, 2017;Frens et al, 2018;Oeldorf-Hirsch and Sundar, 2015). Two forms of feedbackapproval and collaborationtogether with the action of publishing answers, shape the production of SQA community content.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They can also make comments to express their doubts, agreement or opposition or provide additional materials to supplement the content, a process through which users can collaboratively learn from the feedback (Costa et al. , 2017; Frens et al. , 2018; Oeldorf-Hirsch and Sundar, 2015).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%