51 research outputs found

    Multitouch Experiment Instruction and Self-Regulation: Promoting Self-Regulation with a Multitouch Experiment Instruction on the topic of water analysis

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    In context of Education for Sustainable Development (ESD), the range of experiments offered by the SchĂĽlerlabor NanoBioLab at Saarland University was expanded to include an experiment on the topic of water analysis, which provided the basis of the intervention. In addition to the analogue experiment instruction, there is a digital version which is presented as a Multitouch Experiment Instruction (MEI). MEIs are digitally enriched, interactive experiment instructions that accompany the cognitive learning process of pupils and promote competencies in the digital world (Seibert et al., 2020). In this study, we analysed whether the MEI could support self-regulated learning in an indirect support approach by considering different hierarchical levels of self-regulation in the design of the materials. The results show a significant acquisition of self-regulatory competences of learners in grades ten and eleven by using the MEI compared to the analogue version

    Multitouch Experiment Instructions to Promote Self-Regulation in Inquiry-Based Learning in School Laboratories

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    Multitouch experiment instructions (MEIs), implemented as interactive eBooks, are learning tools for pupils that offer various digital support tools and enable pupils to individualize their learning. They may be applied to contexts such as inquiry-based experiments in school laboratories, which involve highly demanding cognitive processes and require a high level of self-regulation. Self-regulation has been shown to be reliably promoted by interventions which include the targeted training of self-regulation strategies. A MEI was designed as an interactive eBook on experiments on the topic “Analysis of Cola”, suitable for an inquiry-based learning environment such as a school lab. The MEI’s potential to promote self-regulated learning was investigated by comparing it to a MEI with digital, integrated self-regulation training. The data revealed a significant increase of self-regulation in the control group, which consisted of pupils experimenting with the MEI on its own, and one experimental group, which included pupils that were supported by the MEI with an additional self-regulation training. It can be assumed that the MEI’s ability to promote self-regulated learning is comparable to the results achieved by an additional self-regulation training which explicitly addressed self-regulation strategies. This highlights the MEI’s potential to promote self-regulated learning in an indirect approach

    Education and ICT-based self-regulation in learning: Theory, design and implementation

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    Handbuch des allgemeinen öffentlichen seerechts im deutschen reiche.

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    Mode of access: Internet
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