Two kinds of meaningful multimedia learning: Is cognitive activity alone as good as combined behavioral and cognitive activity?

Publication date: April 2018 Source:Learning and Instruction, Volume 54 Author(s): Irene T. Skuballa, Anke Dammert, Alexander Renkl Learners should become cognitively active to profit from multimedia representations. However, whether novices’ cognitive engagement should be augmented by behavioral engagement during multimedia learning is controversial. We find support for both stances in the literature: high cognitive engagement and high cognitive-plus-behavioral engagement. We investigated the effectiveness of two types of prompts corresponding to these stances. Study 1 (44 8th-graders) tested a group with think prompts versus a group with think-and-do prompts, whereas Study 2 (94 8th-graders) aimed to additionally investigate whether prompts per se revealed an effect. Although prompts prolonged learning time, think prompts promoted knowledge acquisition. Our findings show that learners who engaged in cognitive activity outperformed those who were prompted for cognitive and behavioral engagement. Pure cognitive engagement benefited retention, transfer, and the retrieval of information focused by prompts. We discuss reasons why behavioral engagement can be detrimental.
Source: Learning and Instruction - Category: Psychiatry & Psychology Source Type: research