Workshop on Educational NLP at the 20th EATEL Summer School

Workshop on Educational NLP at the 20th EATEL Summer School

New Pub
At this year's JTEL Summer school, Sebastian Gombert and Amir Rajabi from DIPF hosted a workshop on Natural Language Processing (NLP) for Education and Research. Participants explored how modern language technologies can support both educational practice and scientific inquiry. The session introduced core NLP concepts and discussed applications ranging from automated assessment and feedback generation to classroom discourse analysis, literature synthesis, and retrieval-augmented generation. Following the introductory presentation, participants worked collaboratively in small groups to design NLP-based solutions for real-world challenges. Drawing on both provided examples and their own research interests, attendees developed concepts for systems such as educational recommender tools, feedback assistants, and research support applications. Interactive collaboration was supported through discussion, sketching, and digital whiteboarding. The workshop highlighted not only the growing potential of large language models and…
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[New Pub] Automatic Short Answer Grading with LLMs: From Memorization to Reasoning

[New Pub] Automatic Short Answer Grading with LLMs: From Memorization to Reasoning

New Pub
On 01. Mai, Longwei Cong presented his paper “Automatic Short Answer Grading with LLMs: From Memorization to Reasoning” at the 16th International Conference on Learning Analytics and Knowledge. The paper examines the performance of fine-tuned PLMs and LLMs across different dataset sizes and compares them with prompt-based approaches for automatic short answer grading. The results show that fine-tuned LLMs and rubric-based prompting can match or even exceed the performance of BERT-based models. In particular, rubric-based prompting with open-weight models can deliver competitive results without requiring annotated training data or hardware-intensive fine-tuning, while also helping to address data protection concerns. This work provides empirical evidence for the role of LLMs in automatic short answer grading and opens up future research directions on resource-efficient, interpretable, and reasoning-driven grading. You can find the…
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[New Pub] Are rubrics all you need? Towards rubric-based automatic short answer scoring via guided rubric-answer alignment

[New Pub] Are rubrics all you need? Towards rubric-based automatic short answer scoring via guided rubric-answer alignment

New Pub
Rubrics are everywhere in education — but surprisingly, most AI systems for grading short answers barely use them. In our recent paper, Are Rubrics All You Need?, presented by Sebastian Gombert at the LAK 2026, we introduce rubric-based automatic short-answer scoring, a new approach where AI models explicitly align student answers with rubric criteria instead of treating grading as a black-box classification problem. We propose two novel architectures, GRAASP and ToLeGRAA, which use transformer-based alignment mechanisms to compare learner responses directly against rubric descriptions. Across German and English benchmark datasets, the models achieved highly competitive performance and transferred better to unseen questions than traditional instance-based classifiers. Particularly exciting is ToLeGRAA’s ability to generate token-level alignment maps, making it possible to visualize which parts of a student answer correspond to specific…
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🤖 Robots in the Classroom — Sebastian Wollny on the “Sitzenbleiben” Podcast

🤖 Robots in the Classroom — Sebastian Wollny on the “Sitzenbleiben” Podcast

Digitalisation, Press, Robots in Education, Transfer Activity
What do soccer-playing robots, telepresence droids, and 3D printers have in common? They're all reshaping what education looks like — and our very own Sebastian Wollny sat down with the DIPF parent podcast Sitzenbleiben to break it all down. 🎙️ 📣 Note: This episode is in German. Robotics in education is no longer a distant vision. In Episode 48 of Sitzenbleiben, Sebastian — researcher in our Educational Technologies group and trained electrical engineer with a specialization in automation — explains how robots are already making their way into schools and what that means for students and teachers alike. The conversation covers a surprisingly wide range of real-world applications: 🏫 Telepresence robots that let sick children stay physically "present" in their classroom — a friend can even take the robot-avatar along…
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How AI Systems Impact Mathematics Achievement in Rural Areas

How AI Systems Impact Mathematics Achievement in Rural Areas

Artificial Intelligence, PhD defense, School
On Friday, May 8, 2026, Rashmi Khazanchi successfully defended her doctoral dissertation, "Artificial Intelligence in Education: Impact of AI-Based Systems on Mathematics Achievement," at the Open Universiteit in Heerlen. The defense was supervised by Prof. Dr. Hendrik Drachsler, who holds a guest professorship at the Open Universiteit, alongside co-promotor Prof. Dr. Daniele Di Mitri (German University of Digital Sciences). The Research Question Khazanchi's work addresses a pressing challenge in education: whether AI-based learning systems can help close the mathematics achievement gap for students from socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds. Her research focused on students in a rural school district in South Georgia, USA — a setting often characterized by limited resources and a shortage of qualified teachers. What Was Studied The school implemented two AI-based systems to support struggling learners: ALEKS, an…
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Hendrik Drachsler Receives Outstanding Community Work Award from SoLAR

Hendrik Drachsler Receives Outstanding Community Work Award from SoLAR

Award, Conference, Team
In recognition of his outstanding dedication to the Learning Analytics community, Hendrik Drachsler was presented with the Outstanding Community Work Award by the Society for Learning Analytics Research (SoLAR) at the 16th International Learning Analytics & Knowledge Conference (LAK26) on 30 April 2026 in Bergen, Norway. 🏆 The award recognises Hendrik’s long-standing commitment to strengthening the SoLAR community and supporting the development of Learning Analytics as an international research field. In her laudatio, SoLAR President Prof. Blaženka Divjak highlighted Hendrik’s continuous engagement with the Society for Learning Analytics Research since its early years. He has contributed to the community in many roles, including as a SoLAR Executive Committee member and Local Chair of LAK20. He has also helped create spaces for exchange and collaboration by organising and supporting workshops that…
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