Enhancing goal attainment in higher education with a scripted conversational agent
Effects of monitoring and reflection support in digital learning
G. Martins van Jaarsveld (TU Delft - Web Information Systems, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam)
Jacqueline Wong (Universiteit Utrecht, TU Delft - Statistics)
Martine Baars (Radboud Universiteit Nijmegen)
Marcus M. Specht (FernUniversität in Hagen, TU Delft - Web Information Systems)
Fred Paas (University of New South Wales, Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam)
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Abstract
Self-regulated learning (SRL) is essential for academic success in higher education, yet many students struggle to effectively regulate their own learning behaviours. While goal-setting interventions can help students set high-quality goals as the foundation for their learning behaviours, additional supports are needed to help transition from goal setting into effective goal striving. This study examines the impact of monitoring and reflection supports, delivered through a scripted conversational agent, on students’ goal attainment, SRL skills, and academic performance. In this study, 84 undergraduate students were randomly assigned to one of four experimental conditions: Control, Monitoring Only, Reflection Only, or Monitoring & Reflection. Over a five-week intervention, participants engaged in weekly goal-setting activities, with additional monitoring and/or reflection prompts depending on their assigned condition. Results showed that participants in the Monitoring Only and Monitoring & Reflection conditions reported significantly higher goal attainment than those in the Reflection Only and Control groups, suggesting that monitoring plays a critical role in reinforcing goal-directed behaviour. While SRL skills improved across all conditions, no significant differences were found between groups, indicating that consistent goal setting alone may support SRL development. There were no significant effects of the intervention on academic performance. These findings highlight the immediate effectiveness of progress-monitoring activities and suggest that reflection may require longer intervention periods to have significant effects. This study supports the use of conversational agents for delivering scalable SRL support and provides insights into the design of multi-phase SRL supports in digital education.