Extending video interactions to support self-regulated learning in an online course
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14742/apubs.2018.1901Keywords:
self-regulated learning, video interactions, in-video quizzesAbstract
Although self-regulated learning (SRL) is essential part of learning, students often commence studies with poor SRL skills. This places much emphasis on course design to foster SRL. In online education, this is a complex undertaking. The present study examines how online technologies can be harnessed to promote SRL. This study of an online first year course (N=138) investigates how student use of a video annotation tool incorporating in-video quizzes can predict learning outcomes and foster SRL. The study found that students were more likely to complete the in-quiz self-assessment questions than contribute to socially-shared resources such as annotations or summaries. This finding may be a result of the higher cognitive load associated with writing tasks versus responses to in-video questions. The findings also revealed a strong positive association (R2=0.45) between student completion of the in-video quizzes and course grade. It is not surprising that quiz attempts reflect performance. However, it is important to consider the interaction between the correct and incorrect responses. Above a certain threshold of positive answers, the association between incorrect in-video quiz submissions and final grade becomes negative. The study has implications on how analytics are interpreted and how instructors can frame feedback to foster SRL skills.
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Copyright (c) 2024 Ysabella Van Sebille, Srecko Joksimovic, Vitomir Kovanovic, Negin Mirriahi, Romany Stansborough, Shane Dawson
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.