A model for new media data mining and analysis in online English teaching using long short-term memory (LSTM) network

PeerJ Comput Sci. 2024 Feb 15:10:e1869. doi: 10.7717/peerj-cs.1869. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

To maintain a harmonious teacher-student relationship and enable educators to gain a more insightful understanding of students' learning progress, this study collects data from learners utilizing the software through a network platform. These data are mainly formed by the user's learning characteristics, combined with the screen lighting time, built-in inertial sensor attitude, signal strength, network strength and other multi-dimensional characteristics to form the learning observation value, so as to analyze the corresponding learning state, so that teachers can carry out targeted teaching improvement. The article introduces an intelligent classification approach for learning time series, leveraging long short-term memory (LSTM) as the foundation of a deep network model. This model intelligently recognizes the learning status of students. The test results demonstrate that the proposed model achieves highly precise time series recognition using relatively straightforward features. This precision, exceeding 95%, is of significant importance for future applications in learning state recognition, aiding teachers in gaining an intelligent grasp of students' learning status.

Keywords: Deep learning; New media teaching; Online teaching ecosystem.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by College of Technology, Hubei Engineering University’s “One Excellent Course for One Teacher” Project in 2023-Qualified Course College English (I) (No.12 [2023] of Hugong New Institute of Technology) and the research results of the 2023 teaching research project of College of Technology, Hubei Engineering University-the construction of college English smart classroom from the perspective of artificial intelligence (2023JY15). The funders had a role in the study design. The funders had no role in data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.