Week 2: Explore Research on Multimedia [Oct. 10, 2011, 12:24 p.m.]
Implications of Limited Capacity
- Capacity to take in information is limited
- Extraneous, essential, and generative processing combine to create a cognite load
- Too much extraneous information unrelated to learning goals interferes with essential and generative processing.
- Too much essential information (too much or too complex to easily process) can interfere with generative or deep processing
- Learners sometimes do not process the information more deeply with generative processing
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Learning can be improved by:
- Reducing extraneous processing
- Managing essential processing
- Fostering generative processing
Limited Capacity Presentation (draft)
Reducing Extraneous Processing
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Coherence: Learners perform better when extranous material is excluded
- Excluding interesting but irrelevant images and words
- Excluding interesting but irrelevant sounds and music
- Excluding unneeded symbols and words
- Signaling: Learners perform better when cues show the structure of the lesson and highlight what is important
- Redundancy: Learners perform better with graphics and narration than graphics, narration, and printed text
- Spatial contiguity: Learners perform better when relevant text is near the corresponding image
- Temporal contiguity: Learners perform better when words are presented with the image simultaneously
Managing Essential Processing
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Segmenting: Learners perform better when information is broken up into parts
- Complex information is best broken up into parts
- Learners perform better when they control the pace
- Pretraining: People learn more deeply when they know key definitions and concepts before hand
- Modality: Learners perform better when images are presented along with the spoken word rather than printed text
Fostering Generative Processing
- Multimedia: Learners perform better when presented with words and pictures than when presented with words alone
- Personalization: Learners perform better when when words are conversational rather than formal
- Voice: Learners perform better when information is presented by a friendly human voice than a computer generated voice