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Teaching Case-Based Argumentation Through a Model and Examples PDF

286 Pages·2001·1.23 MB·English
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Teaching Case-Based Argumentation Through a Model and Examples Ph.D. Dissertation Vincent Aleven Intelligent Systems Program University of Pittsburgh 1997 TEACHING CASE-BASED ARGUMENTATION THROUGH A MODEL AND EXAMPLES by Vincent A. W. M. M. Aleven M.Sc. Computer Science, Delft University of Technology, 1988 M.Sc. Intelligent Systems, University of Pittsburgh, 1992 Submitted to the Graduate Faculty of the Intelligent Systems Program in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy University of Pittsburgh 1997 Copyright by Vincent A. W. M. M. Aleven 1997 TEACHING CASE-BASED ARGUMENTATION THROUGH A MODEL AND EXAMPLES Vincent Aleven, Ph.D. University of Pittsburgh, 1997 CATO is an intelligent learning environment designed to help beginning law students learn basic skills of making arguments with cases. Using CATO, students practice tasks of induction and analogical argumentation. They practice testing theories against a body of cases and making written arguments about a problem, comparing and con- trasting it to past cases. CATO’s model addresses arguments in which two opponents analogize a problem to favorable cases, distinguish unfavorable cases, assess the significance of similarities and differences between cases in light of normative knowledge about the domain, and use that knowledge to organize multi-case arguments. CATO communicates the model to students by presenting dynamically-generated argumentation examples and by rei- fying argument structure based on the model. CATO also provides a case database and tools based on the model that help make students’ tasks more manageable. CATO was evaluated in the context of an actual legal writing course, in a study involving 30 first-year law students. We found that instruction with CATO leads to statistically significant improvement in students’ basic argumentation skills, compara- ble to that achieved by an experienced legal writing instructor teaching groups of 4-10 students. However, on a more advanced legal writing assignment, meant to explore the frontier of the CATO instruction, students taught by the legal writing instructor had higher grades, suggesting a need for more integrated practice with the CATO model. CATO contributes to AI research fields modeling educational techniques as well as case-based and legal reasoning. It is a novel result that students can learn basic argu- mentation skills by studying computer-generated examples. It means that an instruc- tional system does not necessarily need to rely on a very sophisticated understanding of students’ arguments, which would be a significant obstacle to developing such sys- tems. Also, CATO presents novel techniques for using background knowledge to support similarity assessment in case-based reasoning. Drawing on its background knowledge, CATO characterizes and re-characterizes cases in order to argue that two cases are similar or different. This is an important skill in the legal domain not previously mod- eled. CATO’s arguments may help a user in assessing the similarity of cases in a more discriminatory way.

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It was he who intro- duced me to the research fields of case-based reasoning and AI and Law. His dedication to these fields and his keen sense of what are I am very grateful to Kevin Deasy of the University of Pittsburgh School of Law for It may be a formula for a chemical compound, a proc-.
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