“…Thus, it is hard to compare our positive findings regarding the effectiveness of 360° videos as learning tools, with these negative or null findings: in the study by Ulrich (Ulrich et al, 2019), indeed, the content of the video was not created on purpose for the learning goal, but it was the mere videorecording, although spherical, of the traditional lesson; in the study by Chang et al (2018), the object of the investigation was not the efficacy of the video per se but the comparison between two learning instruction strategies, therefore nothing can be said about the role of the video in this context. Only one study, to our knowledge, reported beneficial effects of this new technology on learning (Wu, Guo, Wang, Zeng, & Wu, 2019): in this experiment researchers proposed to a group of elementary students a learning activity based on the exploration of a 360° image illustrating a scientific concept; the control group, instead, viewed a video with common teaching explanations of the same scientific topic, combined with the exhibits of a science museum. Even though the 360 content was not conveyed immersively (the students saw the image on a tablet, using the translational and rotational movements of the device to explore the environment), those children belonging to the experimental group got better learning outcomes and greater problem solving abilities compared to their classmates belonging to the control group.…”