Conference Proceedings

Procedural and conceptual confusion in a discovery-based digital learning environment

PG De Barba, G Kennedy, K Trezise

Ascilite 2018 Conference Proceedings 35th International Conference of Innovation Practice and Research in the Use of Educational Technologies in Tertiary Education Open Oceans Learning Without Borders | Published : 2018

Open access

Abstract

Confusion has been found beneficial to learning in specific conditions. However, the roles of procedural and conceptual confusion in such conditions are still unknown. This paper presents a preliminary study investigating the relationship between procedural and conceptual confusion and their impact on learning processes and outcomes in a non-challenging online task. Participants completed an online predict-observe-explain task on star lifecycles, which included a star simulation. One group watched a video tutorial on how to use the simulation prior to the task (n=22), while the control group did not (n=22). The tutorial group reported higher confidence and lower challenge in using the simula..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by Australian Research Council