Multimedia Learning in an Interactive Self-Explaining Environment: What Works in the Design of Agent-Based Microworlds? 论文

2003Journal of Educational Psychology引用 402
Visual and Cognitive Learning ProcessesAdvanced Text Analysis TechniquesInnovative Teaching and Learning Methods

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Journal of Educational Psychology
发表日期
2003-11-12
发表年份
2003

关键词

Visual and Cognitive Learning ProcessesAdvanced Text Analysis TechniquesInnovative Teaching and Learning Methods

摘要

Students learned about electric motors by asking questions and receiving answers from an on-screen pedagogical agent named Dr. Phyz who stood next to an on-screen drawing of an electric motor. Students performed better on a problem-solving transfer test when Dr. Phyz's explanations were presented as narration rather than on-screen text (Experiment 1), when students were able to ask questions and receive answers interactively rather than receive the same information as a noninteractive multimedia message (Experiments 2a and 2b), and when students were given a prequestion to guide their self-explanations during learning (Experiment 3). Deleting Dr. Phyz's image from the screen had no significant effect on problem-solving transfer performance (Experiment 4). The results are consistent with a cognitive theory of multimedia learning and yield principles for the design of interactive multimedia learning environments. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)