Feature extraction for classifying students based on their academic performance

Agoritsa Polyzou, George Karypis

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Developing tools to support students and learning in a traditional or online setting is a significant task in today’s educational environment. The initial steps towards enabling such technologies using machine learning techniques focused on predicting the student’s performance in terms of the achieved grades. The disadvantage of these approaches is that they do not perform as well in predicting poor-performing students. The objective of our work is two-fold. First, in order to overcome this limitation, we explore if poorly performing students can be more accurately predicted by formulating the problem as binary classification. Second, in order to gain insights as to which are the factors that can lead to poor performance, we engineered a number of human-interpretable features that quantify these factors. These features were derived from the students’ grades from the University of Minnesota, an undergraduate public institution. Based on these features, we perform a study to identify different student groups of interest, while at the same time, identify their importance.

Original languageEnglish (US)
StatePublished - Jan 1 2018
Event11th International Conference on Educational Data Mining, EDM 2018 - Buffalo, United States
Duration: Jul 15 2018Jul 18 2018

Conference

Conference11th International Conference on Educational Data Mining, EDM 2018
Country/TerritoryUnited States
CityBuffalo
Period7/15/187/18/18

Keywords

  • Academic student success
  • Classification
  • Feature importance

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