Embedded Blended Learning Within an Algebra Classroom: A Multimedia Capture Experiment

Jim G. Smith, Sawako Suzuki

Producción científicarevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

This two-group, pretest-posttest, quasi-experimental study compared secondary students' learning of Algebra II materials over a 4-week period when identical instruction by the same teacher was delivered through either embedded blended learning (treatment group; n  = 32) or a live-lecture classroom (control group; n  = 24). For both groups, instruction was delivered in a normal classroom setting. A math test and a student survey were used to measure students' learning of Algebra II and satisfaction with the instruction. Students in the treatment group showed significantly greater gains in Algebra II test scores and evaluated their learning experiences significantly more positively than did the control group. The great majority (80%) of students in the treatment group preferred the embedded blended learning over traditional live lectures for future learning of math. Students' responses to open-ended survey questions suggested that students in the treatment group appreciated the: (a) ability to control the pace of instruction; (b) new role of the classroom teacher; (c) lack of distraction in the blended learning environment; and (d) accessibility of the embedded multimedia lessons outside the classroom. This study suggests that screen-capture instructional technology can be used towards establishing a teacher-based, embedded blended learning environment within a secondary algebraic classroom.

Idioma originalAmerican English
PublicaciónJournal of Computer Assisted Learning
Volumen31
DOI
EstadoPublished - abr 1 2015

Disciplines

  • Education

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