2.2 Personalization Principle
An emerging area of study in e-learning is the
personalization principle (Clark & Mayer, 2008).
Simply stated, the personalization principle
examines the use of a conversational style rather
than a formal writing style when presenting learning
material to the distance learner (Moreno & Mayer,
2000, 2004). Evidence has emerged that suggests
that the voice of the speaker plays an important role
and that conversational text may be more effective
when heard audibly rather than in written form
(Clark & Mayer, 2008). Clark and Mayer also
describe pedagogical agents, also known as coaches,
which can be cartoon-like characters, talking head
video, or even virtual reality avatars. Recent
research in this new area has shown that these
pedagogical agents using the personalization
principle generated more learning than without them
(Atkinson, 2002; Moreno, et al., 2001). Some of
this research has also shown that there does not
appear to be a difference whether the agent is a
computer animation or a talking head video (Moreno
et al., 2001). The voice of the agent also seems to be
important to learning. A recent study where some
students were learning word problems from an agent
with computer generated voice and some from a
human voice found that they learned better from the
human voice (Atkinson, 2002; Atkinson, et al.,
2005).
3 RESEARCH METHODS
3.1 Subjects
The participants of this study were randomly
selected university undergraduate students, ages, 18-
22, enrolled in either “Introduction to computers” or
“Using computers in a classroom.”
3.2 Procedures
Each participant used an internet browser on a
computer connected to the internet to participate in
the study. The study was delivered using the web
programming language PHP attached to a MySQL
database, and consisted of a demographic section,
treatment and measurement. The participants first
filled out a short demographic survey, which
contained the following: name, age, academic
progress (grade), gender, and general contact
information. Once a participant submitted the
demographic survey, the treatment program selected
one of four treatments of the same instructional
content.
The database used a random reduction rule that
randomly assigned the learner to one of the four
groups. The next learner was then assigned to one of
the three remaining groups. The third learner was
assigned to one of the two remaining groups and the
fourth was assigned to the remaining group. The
fifth learner was assigned to one of four groups and
so on until all participants were assigned to a group.
This assured randomness in the distribution of the
task. After participants viewed the approximately
twenty-five minutes of instructional material, they
were then given the learning assessment. Once
submitted to the treatment program, the database
recorded the demographic information, version of
the treatment, and assessment score to a serial
number in the system for later retrieval and analysis.
This was a custom developed web engine for
creating and managing data.
3.3 Task
The task was a 25 minute lesson on the history of the
internet ranging from Sputnik and the foundation of
ARPA (Advanced Research Project Association) to
the commercialization of the internet in the early
1990’s. It consisted of a review of the major themes
and concepts to set the stage for the learning
material followed by a quick summative review to
assist in schema construction. Then, the core lesson
was delivered to the learners followed by a review of
the major themes and concepts to assist working
memory in correlating the new information with
previously held schema.
This information was chosen to give the research
a more universal audience without being too
specialized in any one field or curricula. Also, it had
the ability to appear relevant to the student but had
no actual impact on their course outcome unless the
instructor wished it. Therefore the instructor could
apply the lesson to a standard e-learning course
without the study causing perceived interference
with course outcomes.
This study tested three hypotheses.
1. There will be no statistically significant
difference between instruction delivered with
instructor led video and instruction delivered
without instructor led video.
2. There will be no statistically significant
difference between instruction delivered with
multimedia elements and instruction delivered
without multimedia elements.
HEARD AND SEEN - Instructor Led Video and its Effect on Learning
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