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Effects of Segmentation and Self-Explanation Designs on Cognitive Load in Instructional Videos

Title
Effects of Segmentation and Self-Explanation Designs on Cognitive Load in Instructional Videos
Authors
Zheng H.Jung E.Li T.Yoon M.
Ewha Authors
윤미현
SCOPUS Author ID
윤미현scopus
Issue Date
2022
Journal Title
Contemporary Educational Technology
ISSN
1309-517XJCR Link
Citation
Contemporary Educational Technology vol. 14, no. 2
Keywords
Cognitive loadInstructional videoMultimedia learning design principleSegmentationSelf-explanation
Publisher
Bastas
Indexed
SCOPUS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
This experimental study examined the effects of segmentation and self-explanation designs on cognitive load in instructional videos. Four types of instructional videos (segmentation, self-explanation, combined, and control) were created and tested by 121 undergraduate students randomly assigned to one of four research groups. The results of students’ self-ratings on the cognitive load survey showed that the segmenting design produced a significantly less germane cognitive load than the two non-segmenting designs (self-explanation and control). The self-explanation design did not produce a significantly more germane load than the control design. However, students’ dispositions toward segmentation and self-explanation designs were generally positive and supported the theoretical justifications reported in the literature. The findings are discussed, along with segmentation dilemmas, limitations, and future study implications. © 2022 by the authors; licensee CEDTECH by Bastas.
DOI
10.30935/CEDTECH/11522
Appears in Collections:
ETC > ETC
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