Proceedings of the Eighth ACM Conference on Learning @ Scale 2021
DOI: 10.1145/3430895.3460142
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What's In It for the Learners? Evidence from a Randomized Field Experiment on Learnersourcing Questions in a MOOC

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Cited by 15 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…An investigation of which of these versions most helped students in testing-related exam questions yielded no significant differences [64]. A similar result has later been observed by Singh et al [55] who found no significant differences between students who created MCQs and those who only answered them.…”
Section: Student Learningsupporting
confidence: 74%
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“…An investigation of which of these versions most helped students in testing-related exam questions yielded no significant differences [64]. A similar result has later been observed by Singh et al [55] who found no significant differences between students who created MCQs and those who only answered them.…”
Section: Student Learningsupporting
confidence: 74%
“…However, in very large courses where even a small proportion of active students can generate a repository of a useful size, there may be value in allowing students to choose whether to create or simply use the generated resources. In a very recent exploration of this idea in the context of a MOOC, Singh et al find that when content creation is optional, learners perceive more value in creating questions and create higher quality questions than when content generation is required [55].…”
Section: B Engaging Studentsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Pese a estos datos, que permiten valorar la pertinencia del diseño y contenido propuestos, los resultados alcanzados reclaman la necesidad de reforzar el sentido práctico de estos cursos, orientándolos hacia una empleabilidad de los aprendizajes a partir de un diseño innovador que responda a las necesidades de los alumnos, tal como defienden Liu et al (2019). En este sentido, aprovechar las ventajas de la tecnología y tomar como base los principios del Diseño Universal de Aprendizaje (DUA) (Al-Azawei et al, 2017) facilitaría la puesta en marcha de diferentes alternativas de acceso al conocimiento y permitiría a los alumnos definir el grado de implicación que desean establecer con el curso, pudiendo adoptar incluso el rol de creador de recursos, ideas y soluciones, tal como abogan Abdi et al (2021) o Singh et al (2021), entre otros.…”
Section: Conclusiones Y Discusionesunclassified
“…With respect to creating content, issues of low motivation can prevent learners from properly engaging with the generative aspects of learnersourcing. Indeed, prior research has shown that students tend to be much more inclined to use and evaluate resources created by others than they are to create resources themselves [9,10,11]. With respect to utilising the resources produced by other learners, one of the widely cited issues with learnersourcing is the low quality of some of the content generated by novices [12,13,14].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%