2017
DOI: 10.28945/3728
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The Effects of Instructional Design on Student Engagement with Video Lectures at Cyber Universities

Abstract: Aim/Purpose: The number of students enrolled in online courses that use video lectures is on the rise. However, research shows that the number of students watching video lectures is low, and the number watching videos to completion is even lower. Background: This paper seeks to understand this problem by looking for correlations between instructional design and student engagement with video lectures. Methodology: Students at a cyber-university in South Korea (n=1801) were surveyed on their perception of th… Show more

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Cited by 25 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…The act of watching an online lecture video can perhaps, in and of itself, be considered a sign of course engagement, with estimates in the literature suggesting that only 50% of the students watch all videos in e-learning settings (Costley, Hughes, & Lange, 2017). For this reason, lecture behaviors have often been viewed as signals of further student engagement in learning processes relevant to course materials.…”
Section: Motivation and Lecture Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The act of watching an online lecture video can perhaps, in and of itself, be considered a sign of course engagement, with estimates in the literature suggesting that only 50% of the students watch all videos in e-learning settings (Costley, Hughes, & Lange, 2017). For this reason, lecture behaviors have often been viewed as signals of further student engagement in learning processes relevant to course materials.…”
Section: Motivation and Lecture Behaviorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Nevertheless, considering student procrastination tendency during the instructional design stage and adding elements such as mandatory viewing of the online videos throughout the semester was found effective in encouraging timely viewing (Costley, Hughes, & Lange, 2017). Another challenge is the short attention span of the viewers.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Third, in terms of the multiple regression, the students' age variable was a significant variable during test 2, but in the final semester examination, the students' age was immaterial. In support of the finding during test 2, Costley, Hughes and Lange (2017) argued that younger and older students engage with video lectures differently. However, this study's finding suggests that over time, the students' age, for the student who watched the video lectures, does not influence their performance.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 76%