Enacting control with student dashboards: The role of motivation
Publication year
2024Author(s)
Number of pages
17 p.
Source
Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 40, 3, (2024), pp. 1137-1153ISSN
Publication type
Article / Letter to editor
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Organization
SW OZ BSI OLO
Journal title
Journal of Computer Assisted Learning
Volume
vol. 40
Issue
iss. 3
Languages used
English (eng)
Page start
p. 1137
Page end
p. 1153
Subject
Learning and PlasticityAbstract
Background: Even though monitoring and control enactment are key aspects of self-regulated learning (SRL), Adaptive learning technologies (ALTs) may reduce the need for learners to monitor and control their learning. Personalized dashboards are effective in supporting learners' monitoring and can potentially support control behaviour. Allowing learners to enact control over their learning process, seems to hold potential for increasing their motivation. Objectives: Therefore, this study's aim was to investigate the relation between control enactment and motivation. We examined how learners enacted control while learning with an ALT with personalized dashboards and examined the relation between learners' enactment of control and their motivation. Methods: Seventy-eight primary school learners (Grade 5) participated. During the lesson, learners worked on mathematics in the ALT and concurrently were shown personalized visualizations that supported monitoring and enacting control over their learning process. Learners could enact control to change problems' difficulty to easy, medium, or hard. Motivation was measured before and after learning. Results: The SEM analyses showed that how learners enacted control was related to their motivation. Choosing difficult problems was related to more enjoyment and competence while choosing easy problems related to more pressure and tension. Learners who complied with the suggested difficulty level experienced less choice, but also less pressure/tension and more enjoyment and competence. Conclusions: These results provide avenues to account for broader learner characteristics like SRL and motivation to optimize learning. This way, hybrid systems in which control enactment is a shared responsibility of the system and learner, can be improved to support SRL development.
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
- Academic publications [243110]
- Electronic publications [129802]
- Faculty of Social Sciences [29977]
- Open Access publications [104351]
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