compared to normal lectures. Participants of the
field study rather agreed (M = 3.14, SD = 1.04) to
the statement “By using mobile devices in this
lecture I learned more than in normal lectures.”
Interests on self-regulated learning (n = 19; 7 items)
and motivation to study (n=21, 3 items) before and
after the lecture were assessed with questionnaires.
There were no significant changes from pre to post
(interest: t(18) = -.57, p > .5; motivation:
t(21) = -1.5, p = .15). Both interest (M
pre
= 3.03,
SD
pre
= .68; M
post
= 3.08, SD
post
= .61; scale ranging
from 1 to 4) as motivation to study (M
pre
= 5.24,
SD
pre
= .59; M
post
= 5.35, SD
post
= .54; scale ranging
from 1 to 6) remained on a high level. Twenty-two
students participated in the achievement test. Scores
ranged from zero to eight points (the test has 10
items – one point for each item was given). The
mean score was 3.96 (SD = 2.40).
4 CONCLUSIONS
Auditorium Mobile Classroom Service (AMCS)
provides an opportunity to support students during
university lectures. The six features aim at fostering
regulation and mastering demands of self-regulating
learning. The core elements of AMCS are derived
from empirical studies (e.g., Kapp, Proske, Narciss,
& Körndle, 2011) and theoretical considerations
based on models of self-regulation (e.g.
Zimmerman, 2000). The first test of the pilot is seen
as a demonstration of how learning questions,
cognitive and metacognitive prompts can be used in
university lectures in order to support students in
mastering the demands of this learning situation. Via
mobile devices, university lectures are made
adaptive – learning questions and individual prompts
are tailored to the personal goals and learning
processes of the students.
The interactivity is increased by interventions,
which animate students to engage in content
(learning questions) and by establishing a
communication channel (via the mobile devices of
the students), which allows the learning environment
to interact with the students (via predefined prompts
and messages by the lecturer).
The results of the pilot are of course limited and
do not go beyond the examination of requirements
necessary to generate learning effects. These
requirements are for example technical
functionalities and acceptance of the system and
self-reported attention, concentration, motivation
and achievement. The first evaluation suggests that
the minimum requirements are met. The intervention
was not perceived as distraction nor judged as
difficult to use during the lecture. The usability of
the system was rated as good and beside some
technical problems students would recommend
AMCS and further use it. First critical arguments
could be refuted: the distraction of the usage of
mobile devices during the lecture does not seem to
constrain learning and the need of extensive
computer literacy is not a requirement to use AMCS.
Nevertheless the data is not sufficient. In future
studies we want to test the system and its
components in large lectures and empirically
evaluate the effects of the single features.
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