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Fang, Ning; Guo, Yongqing – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2023
Computer simulation and animation (CSA) is educational technology in which computer programs are employed to simulate and animate real-world physical phenomena and processes. CSA has attracted growing attention and received an increasing number of applications in the international science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education…
Descriptors: Educational Improvement, Learning Processes, Educational Technology, Computer Software
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Weng, Cathy; Rathinasabapathi, Abirami; Weng, Apollo; Zagita, Cindy – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2019
This study aimed to explore whether the integration of virtual reality and augmented reality used in a specially designed science book could improve the students' science concept learning outcomes. A true experimental research design was conducted to check the effectiveness of the specially designed book in terms of learners' achievement. The…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Computer Simulation, Simulated Environment, Textbooks
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Rosen, Yigal – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2009
The study described here is among the first of its kind to investigate systematically the effect of learning with integrated animations on transfer of knowledge and on motivation to learn science and technology. Four hundred eighteen 5th and 7th grade students across Israel participated in a study. Students in the experimental group participated…
Descriptors: Experimental Groups, Animation, Learning Motivation, Foreign Countries
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Esponda-Arguero, Margarita – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2008
This article is a review of the pedagogical experience obtained with systems for algorithmic animation. Algorithms consist of a sequence of operations whose effect on data structures can be visualized using a computer. Students learn algorithms by stepping the animation through the different individual operations, possibly reversing their effect.…
Descriptors: Animation, Teaching Methods, Electronic Learning, Educational Technology
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Clark, Richard E.; Choi, Sunhee – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2007
The point of Choi and Clark (2006) was that after many well-designed studies, they have no evidence for either the learning or the motivational benefits of pedagogical agents. In their study, they found compelling evidence that when agents are found to enhance learning, a less expensive and less distracting pedagogical method has equal or greater…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Instructional Effectiveness, Aesthetics, Criticism
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Veletsianos, George – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2007
Choi and Clark (2006) argue that learning is attributed to the instructional method rather than the specific medium used to deliver instruction (i.e., the pedagogical agent). Additionally, they consider pedagogical agents as unnecessarily expensive tools, whose instructional affordances can be replicated by less expensive options. In this response…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Instructional Effectiveness, Aesthetics, Criticism
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Clark, Richard E.; Choi, Sunhee – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2005
Research on animated pedagogical agents (agents) is viewed as a very positive attempt to introduce more pedagogical support and motivational elements into multi-media instruction. Yet, existing empirical studies that examine the learning benefits of agents have had very mixed results, largely due to the way that they are designed. This article…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Instruction, Student Motivation, Learning Motivation, Multimedia Instruction
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Choi, Sunhee; Clark, Richard E. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2006
This study compared the use of an animated pedagogical agent (agent) with an electronic arrow and voice narration (arrow and voice) in a multimedia learning environment where 74 college level English as a Second Language (ESL) students learned English relative clauses. No significant differences in learning or performance were found between the…
Descriptors: Prior Learning, English (Second Language), Sentence Structure, Educational Media
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Mayer, Richard E. – Journal of Educational Computing Research, 2003
A "science of e-learning" involves the scientific investigation of how people learn in electronic learning environments. Three elements of a science of e-learning are: a) "evidence"--a base of replicated findings from rigorous and appropriate research studies; b) "theory"--a research-based theory of how people learn in electronic learning…
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Classroom Research, Learning Strategies, Learning Theories