Difference between revisions of "Asian/Asian-American Learners in North America"

From Penn Center for Learning Analytics Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page with "Christie et al. (2019) [https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED599217.pdf pdf] * Models predicting student's high school dropout * The decision trees showed little difference in AUC among White, Black, Hispanic, Asian, American Indian and Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander.")
 
(Added Jeong et al (2022))
 
(12 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Christie et al. (2019) [https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED599217.pdf pdf]
Christie et al. (2019) [https://files.eric.ed.gov/fulltext/ED599217.pdf pdf]
* Models predicting student's high school dropout
* Models predicting student's high school dropout
* The decision trees showed little difference in AUC among White, Black, Hispanic, Asian, American Indian and Alaska Native, and  Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander.
* The decision trees showed little difference in AUC among Asian, White, Black, Hispanic, American Indian and Alaska Native, and  Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander.
 
 
Bridgeman et al. (2009) [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/242203403_Considering_Fairness_and_Validity_in_Evaluating_Automated_Scoring page]
* Automated scoring models for evaluating English essays, or e-rater
* E-Rater gave significantly better scores than human rater for 11th grade essays written by Hispanic students and Asian-American students
 
 
 
Lee and Kizilcec (2020) [https://arxiv.org/pdf/2007.00088.pdf pdf]
* Models predicting college success (or median grade or above)
* Random forest algorithms performed significantly better for non-URM students (Asian and White) than for underrepresented minority students (URM; American Indian, Black, Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, Hispanic, and Multicultural)
* The fairness of the model, namely demographic parity and equality of opportunity, as well as its accuracy, improved after correcting the threshold values from 0.5 to group-specific values
 
 
Jiang & Pardos (2021) [https://dl.acm.org/doi/pdf/10.1145/3461702.3462623 pdf]
* Predicting university course grades using LSTM
* Roughly equal accuracy across racial groups
* Slightly better accuracy (~1%) across racial groups when including race in model
 
 
Jeong et al. (2022) [https://fated2022.github.io/assets/pdf/FATED-2022_paper_Jeong_Racial_Bias_ML_Algs.pdf]
* Predicting 9th grade math score from academic performance, surveys, and demographic information
* Despite comparable accuracy, model tends to overpredict Asian students' performance
* Several fairness correction methods equalize false positive and false negative rates across groups.

Latest revision as of 16:03, 4 August 2022

Christie et al. (2019) pdf

  • Models predicting student's high school dropout
  • The decision trees showed little difference in AUC among Asian, White, Black, Hispanic, American Indian and Alaska Native, and Native Hawaiian and Pacific Islander.


Bridgeman et al. (2009) page

  • Automated scoring models for evaluating English essays, or e-rater
  • E-Rater gave significantly better scores than human rater for 11th grade essays written by Hispanic students and Asian-American students


Lee and Kizilcec (2020) pdf

  • Models predicting college success (or median grade or above)
  • Random forest algorithms performed significantly better for non-URM students (Asian and White) than for underrepresented minority students (URM; American Indian, Black, Hawaiian or Pacific Islander, Hispanic, and Multicultural)
  • The fairness of the model, namely demographic parity and equality of opportunity, as well as its accuracy, improved after correcting the threshold values from 0.5 to group-specific values


Jiang & Pardos (2021) pdf

  • Predicting university course grades using LSTM
  • Roughly equal accuracy across racial groups
  • Slightly better accuracy (~1%) across racial groups when including race in model


Jeong et al. (2022) [1]

  • Predicting 9th grade math score from academic performance, surveys, and demographic information
  • Despite comparable accuracy, model tends to overpredict Asian students' performance
  • Several fairness correction methods equalize false positive and false negative rates across groups.