About Me
I started my PhD at Carnegie Mellon
University's
Human Computer
Interaction Insitute in 2008. I am advised
by
Dr. Carolyn Rosé in
the
HCII
and
LTI. My past research focused on various applications of
ontologies and
the
Semantic
Web, but my current participation in
the
Program for Interdisciplinary
Education Research enables me to take an interdisciplinary
approach to learning sciences (more specifically, Computer-Supported
Collaborative Learning).
Research Overview
My research focuses on incorporating
student dispositions (motivation, self-efficacy, life aspirations,
etc) and social influences (identity & positioning) into intelligent
tutoring systems. Much of learning today takes place in social
environments, and I believe it is important to incorporate these social
factors into educational technologies. My main goal is to help students overcome obstacles to effective participation in both academic discussions and the community at large.
Research Interests
computer-mediated communication, virtual agents, dialogue agents, intelligent tutoring systems, computer-supported collaborative learning, information literacy, discourse analysis, motivation and dispositions, educational technologies for underserved communities.
Contact
I can be contacted at
iris AT
cmu DOT
edu