From Data to Decisions: A Scoping Review of Actionable Learning Analytics for Teaching and Assessment
Ademola Busayo Ajayi
*
School of Educational Foundations, Leadership and Aviation, Oklahoma State University, USA.
Maureen Ifeyinwa Emenike
Department of Philosophy, Faculty of Arts, Federal University Oye- Ekiti, Ekiti State, Nigeria.
Benjamin Osaze Enobakhare
Peterbilt Motors (PACCAR Inc), Denton, Texas, USA.
Onyebuchi Arthur Chukwuka
Chart Builders Choice, Lagos, Nigeria.
Eugene Rwandashi
Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia, USA.
Lilian Chinweotito Awah
Department of Educational Management, University of Benin, Benin City, Nigeria.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
This study presents a systematic review of analytics-informed teaching practices, exploring how educators across K–12 and higher education contexts use learning analytics to enhance pedagogy and student outcomes. A comprehensive search across four major databases identified empirical studies grounded in established frameworks, including the Learning Analytics Cycle. The findings reveal consistent benefits, such as increased student engagement and more adaptive instruction, alongside enduring challenges related to limited data literacy, ethical concerns, and infrastructural constraints. The review highlights the need for longitudinal and context-sensitive research to better understand how analytics influence teaching and learning across diverse educational systems. It concludes that the actionability of learning analytics is fundamentally a socio-technical process—one that depends on educators’ data literacy and robust ethical governance to ensure responsible and sustainable impact.
Keywords: Actionable learning analytics, teaching and assessment, data-informed pedagogy, student engagement, educational data mining, inclusive education