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How do higher education students regulate their learning with video modeling examples, worked examples, and practice problems?

Authors :
van Harsel, Milou
Hoogerheide, Vincent
Janssen, Eva
Verkoeijen, Peter
van Gog, Tamara
Leerstoel van Gog
Education and Learning: Development in Interaction
Department of Psychology, Education and Child Studies
Leerstoel van Gog
Education and Learning: Development in Interaction
Source :
Instructional Science, 50(5), 703-728. Springer Netherlands, Instructional Science, 50(5), 703. Springer, Instructional Science, 50(5), 703-728. Springer
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Presenting novices with examples and problems is an effective and efficient way to acquire new problem-solving skills. Nowadays, examples and problems are increasingly presented in computer-based learning environments, in which learners often have to self-regulate their learning (i.e., choose what type of task to work on and when). Yet, it is questionable how novices self-regulate their learning from examples and problems, and to what extent their choices match with effective principles from instructional design research. In this study, 147 higher education students had to learn how to solve problems on the trapezoidal rule. During self-regulated learning, they were free to select six tasks from a database of 45 tasks that varied in task format (video examples, worked examples, practice problems), complexity level (level 1, 2, 3), and cover story. Almost all students started with (video) example study at the lowest complexity level. The number of examples selected gradually decreased and task complexity gradually increased during the learning phase. However, examples and lowest level tasks remained relatively popular throughout the entire learning phase. There was no relation between students' total score on how well their behavior matched with the instructional design principles and learning outcomes, mental effort, and motivational variables.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00204277
Volume :
50
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Instructional Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a9be0277c4a283f6c76bbccc34a2f11f