How instructor-developed screencasts benefit college students' learning of maths: insights from an Irish case study.
Date
2013Author
Ahmad, Tunku Badariah Tunku
Doheny, Frank
Faherty, Sheila
Harding, Nuala
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This qualitative case study explored how students learning Maths at an Irish
institute of higher education benefited from their instructor’s use of selfdeveloped screencasts. The screencasts (47 in total) were posted on the
institute’s Maths Moodle site for students to access. One hundred and thirty-eight
(n = 138) students participated in an online open-response survey. Students’
commentary was analyzed using thematic content analysis (TCA). Themes that
represented different types of screencast benefit to students were generated
from the data. Consistent with previous studies, the findings show that a vast
majority of students (88.4%) used the screencasts for many different purposes and
viewed the videos as an extremely useful tool that enhanced their Maths learning
experience. Ten primary benefits of screencasts emerged, namely allowing
flexible and personalized learning, supplementing lectures and enhancing
understanding of Maths keyskills, facilitating exam revision and material review,
providing multimodal support for Maths learning, helping students to keep track
with the Maths modules, providing a tighter match with course content, delivering
a vicarious learning experience, serving as a memory aid, filling in gaps in class
notes, and making Maths more enjoyable. The findings support the use of
screencasts in facilitating and enhancing students’ learning of Maths in higher
education.
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