Skip to main content

2020 Teaching & Learning Symposium: Does Watching Lecture Videos Improve Grades? Lessons from ENVIR 100

2020 Teaching & Learning Symposium
Does Watching Lecture Videos Improve Grades? Lessons from ENVIR 100
    • Notifications
    • Privacy
  • Project HomeTeaching & Learning Symposium
  • Projects
  • Learn more about Manifold

Notes

Show the following:

  • Annotations
  • Resources
Search within:

Adjust appearance:

  • font
    Font style
  • color scheme
  • Margins
table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Contributors
  4. Contents
  5. Keynote
  6. Posters
    1. Git Version Control Tools Enhance Instructor Feedback and Team Interactions
    2. An Ungrading Experiment
    3. Does Watching Lecture Videos Improve Grades? Lessons from ENVIR 100
    4. Doing Learning Differenty: International Student Experiences with Active Learning
    5. Constructively Aligning Instruction of Scientific Content with Written-Communication Skills
    6. Teaching Climate Change Through Fiction, Data and Lived Experiences
    7. Podcasting and Public Scholarship Pedagogy
    8. Empowering Creators: Student agency and digital safety in alternative assignments
    9. A Structured Feedback Form to Improve Interactivity in Lectures
    10. Developing an Academic Ultrasound Curriculum:​ Hybrid Learning by and for Busy Clinicians​

Does Watching Lecture Videos Improve Grades? Lessons from ENVIR 100

Yen-Chu Weng, Program on the Environment, College of the Environment, UW Seattle

ENVIR 100 is an introductory course to Environmental Studies. This course is taught every quarter – with the spring quarter taught in the online lecture format. The class size ranges between 150 and 200 students. I have co-taught the spring hybrid course for the last three years (2017-2019). All lectures were delivered exclusively online via Panopto recordings on Canvas. In theory, students should watch the lecture videos as a major part of their learning. However, viewing statistics showed that each lecture video was viewed by less than 80% of the students. Nevertheless, the median and distribution of grades from the hybrid courses were similar to the grades from traditional in-person lecture courses. This observation made me wonder: Does watching lecture videos improve grades? In this project, I plan to analyze the correlation between Panopto viewing statistics and student grades. The independent variables are the video viewing statistics. The dependent variables are exam grades and overall course grades. Preliminary results showed a weak positive correlation between video viewing and grades. Students who watched more videos tended to earn higher grades. However, for students earning more than 85% in grades, there were also a significant number of them who watched very little lecture videos. Here I offer two hypothetical explanations of this inconsistency. (1) We provide detailed lecture slides on Canvas. Perhaps studying the lecture slides was enough for students to grasp the course materials. (2) Exams only account for 40% of the course grade. The other components of the course grade (section participation, research papers, and poster project) are not directly related to watching lecture videos. Findings of this project suggest instructors to evaluate the role of lecture videos in student learning. Interactive videos and shorter videos intermixed with readings are some potential ways to keep students engaged in an online course.

Does Watching Lecture Videos Improve Grades Poster

Annotate

Next Chapter
Doing Learning Differenty: International Student Experiences with Active Learning
PreviousNext
Symposiums
Powered by Manifold Scholarship. Learn more at
Opens in new tab or windowmanifoldapp.org