کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
348896 | 618206 | 2011 | 12 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

The effects of dynamic and static visualizations in understanding physical principles of fish locomotion were investigated. Seventy-five students were assigned to one of three conditions: a text-only, a text with dynamic visualizations, or a text with static visualizations condition. During learning, subjects were asked to think aloud. Learning outcomes were measured by tests assessing verbal factual knowledge, pictorial recall as well as transfer. Learners in the two visualization conditions outperformed those in the text-only condition for transfer and pictorial recall tasks, but not for verbal factual knowledge tasks. Analyses of the think-aloud protocols revealed that learners had generated more inferences in the visualization conditions as opposed to the text-only condition. These results were mirrored by students’ self-reported processing demands. No differences were observable between the dynamic and the static condition concerning any of the learning outcome measures. However, think-aloud protocols revealed an illusion of understanding when learning with dynamic as opposed to static visualizations. Furthermore, learners with static visualizations tended to play the visualizations more often. The results stress the importance of not only using outcome-oriented, but also process-oriented approaches to gain deeper insight into learning strategies when dealing with various instructional materials.
Research Highlights
► Multimedia Principle applied to pictorial recall and transfer, but not to verbal factual knowledge
► More inferences in visualization conditions than in text-only condition
► No differences in learning outcomes between dynamic and static visualizations
► More positive monitoring statements in dynamic compared to static visualization condition
► Learners played static visualizations more often than dynamic visualizations.
Journal: Computers & Education - Volume 56, Issue 1, January 2011, Pages 176–187