Summary: | The Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) introduced the measurement of problem-solving skills in the 2012 cycle. The items in this new domain employ scenario-based environments in terms of students interacting with computers. Process data collected from log files are a record of students’ interactions with the testing platform. This study suggests a two-stage approach for generating features from process data and selecting the features that predict students’ responses using a released problem-solving item—the Climate Control Task. The primary objectives of the study are (1) introducing an approach for generating features from the process data and using them to predict the response to this item, and (2) finding out which features have the most predictive value. To achieve these goals, a tree-based ensemble method, the random forest algorithm, is used to explore the association between response data and predictive features. Also, features can be ranked by importance in terms of predictive performance. This study can be considered as providing an alternative way to analyze process data having a pedagogical purpose.
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