Can virtual environments enhance the learning of historical chronology?

Historical time and chronological sequence are usually conveyed to pupils via the presentation of semantic information on printed worksheets, events being rote-memorised according to date. We explored the use of virtual environments in which successive historical events were depicted as "places...

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Veröffentlicht in:Instructional science 2008-03, Vol.36 (2), p.155-173
Hauptverfasser: Foreman, Nigel, Boyd-Davis, Stephen, Moar, Magnus, Korallo, Liliya, Chappell, Emma
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container_title Instructional science
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creator Foreman, Nigel
Boyd-Davis, Stephen
Moar, Magnus
Korallo, Liliya
Chappell, Emma
description Historical time and chronological sequence are usually conveyed to pupils via the presentation of semantic information on printed worksheets, events being rote-memorised according to date. We explored the use of virtual environments in which successive historical events were depicted as "places" in time—space, encountered sequentially in a fly-through. Testing was via "Which came first, X or Y?" questions and picture-ordering. University undergraduates experiencing the history of an imaginary planet performed better after a VE than after viewing a "washing line" of sequential images, or captions alone, especially for items in intermediate list positions. However, secondary children 11–14 years remembered no more about successive events in feudal England when they were presented virtually compared with either paper picture or 2-D computer graphic conditions. Primary children 7–9 years learned more about historical sequence after studying a series of paper images, compared with either VE or computer graphic conditions, remembering more in early/intermediate list positions. Reasons for the discrepant results are discussed and future possible uses of VEs in the teaching of chronology assessed.
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subjects Age groups
Children
Comparative Analysis
Computer Graphics
Computer Simulation
Education
Educational Psychology
Educational Research
Educational technology
Elementary School Students
England
Foreign Countries
History
History education
History Instruction
Instructional Effectiveness
Instructional materials
Learning
Learning and Instruction
Learning Processes
Memory
Pedagogic Psychology
Printing
Secondary School Students
Semantics
Teaching Methods
Thinking Skills
Undergraduate Students
Virtual reality
Washing
title Can virtual environments enhance the learning of historical chronology?
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