Wong Joseph T, Mesghina Almaz, Chen Edward, Yeung Natalie Au, Lerner Bella S, Richland Lindsey Engle
University of California Irvine, School of Education, 3200 Education Bldg, Irvine, CA 92697, USA.
Northwestern University, Department of Psychology, 2029 Sheridan Rd. Evanston, IL. 60208, USA.
Comput Educ Open. 2023 Dec;4:100118. doi: 10.1016/j.caeo.2022.100118. Epub 2022 Nov 30.
The COVID-19 pandemic necessitated a systematic change in course modalities due to the nationwide suspension of in-person instruction, resulting in the transition to emergency remote distance learning via Zoom. This transition certainly facilitated affordances of flexibility and continuity, but with it brought issues of unfamiliarity, lack of confidence, anxiety, distractions, and validity from both the instructors and the student perspectives. This in situ study aimed to better understand the students' learning experiences with Zoom by assessing the social, cognitive, and behavioral factors influencing learner's mind-wandering and its effect on online engagement. Undergraduate students from 14 classes across two research institutions in California ( = 633) were recruited to participate in an online survey while distance learning through a pandemic. Structural equation modeling was used to conduct a path analysis to explain the factors impacting students' online engagement mediated by students' frequency to mind-wander. Study findings revealed that (1) self-efficacy and trait anxiety had significant direct effects on students' mind-wandering; (2) self-efficacy, trait anxiety, task-value beliefs, and mind-wandering had significant direct effects on students' online engagement; and finally (3) the frequency of students' mind-wandering partially mediated the relationship between self-efficacy and engagement and between trait anxiety and engagement. Identifying these structural relationships further confirmed our hypotheses on sources contributing to students' mind-wandering while learning remotely, provided insights into potential mechanisms underpinning students' online engagement, and suggests practical pedagogical learning experience design recommendations for instructors to immediately implement while teaching and learning with Zoom..
由于全国范围内暂停面授教学,新冠疫情使得课程模式发生了系统性变化,从而转向通过Zoom进行紧急远程学习。这种转变固然带来了灵活性和连续性方面的便利,但同时也带来了一些问题,从教师和学生的角度来看,包括不熟悉、缺乏信心、焦虑、分心以及有效性等问题。这项实地研究旨在通过评估影响学习者走神的社会、认知和行为因素及其对在线参与度的影响,更好地了解学生使用Zoom的学习体验。来自加利福尼亚州两所研究机构的14个班级的本科生(n = 633)在疫情期间远程学习时被招募参与一项在线调查。采用结构方程模型进行路径分析,以解释影响学生在线参与度的因素,这些因素由学生走神的频率介导。研究结果表明:(1)自我效能感和特质焦虑对学生的走神有显著的直接影响;(2)自我效能感、特质焦虑、任务价值信念和走神对学生的在线参与度有显著的直接影响;最后(3)学生走神的频率部分介导了自我效能感与参与度之间以及特质焦虑与参与度之间的关系。识别这些结构关系进一步证实了我们关于远程学习时导致学生走神的来源的假设,深入了解了支撑学生在线参与度的潜在机制,并为教师在使用Zoom进行教学时立即实施提供了实用的教学学习体验设计建议。