Students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematics

A flipped classroom lecture approach was utilised in an engineering mathematics course (118 students). This article reports on student viewing habits based on 104 videos over a period of 12 weeks. The video statistics indicate that many students waited until the last day before assignments to watch...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kjetil Liestøl Nielsen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Learning Technology 2020-07-01
Series:Research in Learning Technology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.alt.ac.uk/index.php/rlt/article/view/2404/2708
id doaj-5975c6a6f88f400fae19bb4e849bbe38
record_format Article
spelling doaj-5975c6a6f88f400fae19bb4e849bbe382020-11-25T02:30:53ZengAssociation for Learning Technology Research in Learning Technology2156-70772020-07-0128011210.25304/rlt.v28.2404RLT-28-2404Students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematicsKjetil Liestøl Nielsen0Faculty of Humanities, Sports, and Educational Science, Department of Mathematics and Science Education, University of Southeast Norway, Notodden, NorwayA flipped classroom lecture approach was utilised in an engineering mathematics course (118 students). This article reports on student viewing habits based on 104 videos over a period of 12 weeks. The video statistics indicate that many students waited until the last day before assignments to watch the required videos. There are also indications that the students would try to reduce the heavy workload induced by watching all videos on a single day by skipping videos perceived as less valuable. The data show a strong negative correlation between the length of a video and how much of that video the students watched per viewing setting. However, although students watched less of longer videos, the data also indicate that the students still watched, to a large degree, every part of the videos, just not in a single viewing session. Based on these results, recommendations on video creation and flipped classroom implementation are given.https://journal.alt.ac.uk/index.php/rlt/article/view/2404/2708flipped classroomvideoe-learningviewing habitsvideo preference
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kjetil Liestøl Nielsen
spellingShingle Kjetil Liestøl Nielsen
Students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematics
Research in Learning Technology
flipped classroom
video
e-learning
viewing habits
video preference
author_facet Kjetil Liestøl Nielsen
author_sort Kjetil Liestøl Nielsen
title Students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematics
title_short Students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematics
title_full Students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematics
title_fullStr Students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematics
title_full_unstemmed Students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematics
title_sort students’ video viewing habits during a flipped classroom course in engineering mathematics
publisher Association for Learning Technology
series Research in Learning Technology
issn 2156-7077
publishDate 2020-07-01
description A flipped classroom lecture approach was utilised in an engineering mathematics course (118 students). This article reports on student viewing habits based on 104 videos over a period of 12 weeks. The video statistics indicate that many students waited until the last day before assignments to watch the required videos. There are also indications that the students would try to reduce the heavy workload induced by watching all videos on a single day by skipping videos perceived as less valuable. The data show a strong negative correlation between the length of a video and how much of that video the students watched per viewing setting. However, although students watched less of longer videos, the data also indicate that the students still watched, to a large degree, every part of the videos, just not in a single viewing session. Based on these results, recommendations on video creation and flipped classroom implementation are given.
topic flipped classroom
video
e-learning
viewing habits
video preference
url https://journal.alt.ac.uk/index.php/rlt/article/view/2404/2708
work_keys_str_mv AT kjetilliestølnielsen studentsvideoviewinghabitsduringaflippedclassroomcourseinengineeringmathematics
_version_ 1724827158395748352