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Video: What the research says…

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1 Video: What the research says…
Insert «Academic unit» on every page: 1 Go to the menu «Insert» 2 Choose: Date and time 3 Write the name of your faculty or department in the field «Footer» 4 Choose «Apply to all" Program for University Pedagogy Video: What the research says… Robert Gray University of Bergen 15. Februar 2016

2 Program for University Pedagogy

3 Main Findings Higher dropout rates occur in Longer videos
Program for University Pedagogy Main Findings Higher dropout rates occur in Longer videos Re-watching sessions (vs. first-time viewings) Tutorial videos (vs. lecture videos) Peaks in student interaction activities can indicate student engagement

4 Five Causes for Interaction Peaks
Program for University Pedagogy Five Causes for Interaction Peaks Type 1: starting from the beginning of a new material This reflects students jumping ahead to a particular concept Might suggest need for cutting video into shorter segments

5 Five Causes for Interaction Peaks
Program for University Pedagogy Five Causes for Interaction Peaks Type 2: returning to missed content This reflects a possibility that students needed more time spent on a concept

6 Five Causes for Interaction Peaks
Program for University Pedagogy Five Causes for Interaction Peaks Type 3. following a tutorial step This reflects students watching each step individually And possibly following the steps themselves in a different window

7 Five Causes for Interaction Peaks
Program for University Pedagogy Five Causes for Interaction Peaks Type 4. replaying a brief segment This reflects an important piece of content that students watch over and over

8 Five Causes for Interaction Peaks
Program for University Pedagogy Five Causes for Interaction Peaks Type 5. repeating a non-visual explanation This reflects an important concept that is not marked by clear video transitions

9 Authoring Recommendations
Program for University Pedagogy Authoring Recommendations Avoid abrupt visual transitions Type 2 peaks are likely to indicate too fast or abrupt transitions. These peaks often accompany informative slides, which can be made available outside the video as a screenshot or thumbnail for easier scanning and reviewing. Excessive visual transitions should be avoided because they might prevent students from referring to earlier content.

10 Authoring Recommendations
Program for University Pedagogy Authoring Recommendations Make shorter videos Long lecture videos lead to a higher dropout rate. When determining points to segment long videos, Type 1 peaks can be useful points because students watch from the beginning of that segment.

11 Interface Recommendations
Program for University Pedagogy Interface Recommendations Enable one-click access for steps in tutorial videos Important steps in a tutorial get clear peaks. These peaks can be used to automatically mark steps in a video, making it easy for students to non-sequentially access these points without having to rely on imprecise scrubbing. Tutorial video interfaces such as ToolScape adds an interactive timeline below a video to allow step-by-step navigation.

12 Interface Recommendations
Program for University Pedagogy Interface Recommendations Provide interactive links and screenshots for highlights Type 2 peaks suggest that missing content forces students to return. Providing static screenshots of the peak-creating informative frames might reduce the navigation overhead for students. Type 5 peaks attract students with non-visual information, and our observation suggests that instructors make important points in these peaks. Interactive links to these points can be useful for students willing to find them later, which is especially difficult due to the lack of visual cues.

13 Interface Recommendations
Program for University Pedagogy Interface Recommendations Consider video summarization for selective watchers. A common interaction pattern in our results is non-sequential and selective watching. Students re-watching videos tend to non-sequentially seek their points of interest. Peaks can be used to effectively summarize highlights from a video, which can be useful for students who re-watch or skim through the content while auditing.

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15 Main Findings Shorter videos are much more engaging
Program for University Pedagogy Main Findings Shorter videos are much more engaging Informal talking-head videos are more engaging Khan-style tablet drawings are more engaging Even high-quality pre-recorded classroom lectures are not engaging online videos Students engage differently with lecture and tutorial videos.

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Key Questions Which kinds of videos lead to the best student learning outcomes in a MOOC? How can we to maximize student learning while keeping video production time and financial costs at reasonable levels?

17 Findings & recommendations
Program for University Pedagogy Findings & recommendations

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Relevant Findings Median engagement time is at most 6 minutes, regardless of total video length. Students often make it less than halfway through videos longer than 9 minutes. The shortest videos (0–3 minutes) had the highest engagement and much less variance than all other groups. Students also engaged less frequently with assessment problems that followed longer videos.

19 Relevant findings, cont’d
Program for University Pedagogy Relevant findings, cont’d Shorter videos might contain higher quality instructional content. Perhaps this is because it takes meticulous planning to explain a concept succinctly. Shorter videos are engaging not only due to length but also because they are better planned.

20 Relevant findings, cont’d
Program for University Pedagogy Relevant findings, cont’d Students are more likely to work problems after talking head videos than other videos. The producers felt a human face provides a more “intimate and personal” feel and breaks up the monotony of PowerPoint slides and code screencasts.

21 Relevant findings, cont’d
Program for University Pedagogy Relevant findings, cont’d Low-budget, informal production values seem to be more engaging than higher production values. One instructor was filmed in a tight frame, often making direct eye contact with the student. The other instructor was standing behind a podium, often looking around the room and not directly at the camera. Students are more comfortable when they feel like the presentation is directed right at them rather than to an unnamed audience.

22 Relevant findings, cont’d
Program for University Pedagogy Relevant findings, cont’d Khan-style tutorial videos (i.e., an instructor drawing on a digital tablet) were more engaging than PowerPoint slides and/or code screencasts. Students engaged more with lectures which were prepared with edX usage in mind, than with lectures which were adapted from old lecture videos. To maximize student engagement, instructors must plan their lessons specifically for an online video format. Presentation styles that have worked well for centuries in traditional in-person lectures do not necessarily make for effective online educational videos.

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