You are here:

Do pedagogical agents make a difference to student motivation and learning?
ARTICLE

,

Educational Research Review Volume 6, Number 1, ISSN 1747-938X Publisher: Elsevier Ltd

Abstract

Pedagogical agents, characters that guide through multimedia learning environments, recently gained increasing interest. A review was published by Clarebout, Elen, Johnson and Shaw in 2002 where a lot of promises were made, but research on the motivational and learning effects of pedagogical agents was scarce. More than 70 articles on pedagogical agents have been published since, and 26 of them examine motivational and learning effects. We map out this research in order to answer three main questions: Do pedagogical agents facilitate learner motivation and learning? Under what conditions are they effective? How should they be designed? The review reveals that various studies have not investigated the first two fundamental questions due to a lack of control groups. As research on pedagogical agents is highly complex, we propose a multi-level framework to enable systematic comparisons between different studies and the identification of gaps in the literature. This framework can be further applied to conceptualize and situate future studies.

Citation

Heidig, S. & Clarebout, G. (2011). Do pedagogical agents make a difference to student motivation and learning?. Educational Research Review, 6(1), 27-54. Elsevier Ltd. Retrieved May 28, 2023 from .

This record was imported from Educational Research Review on January 29, 2019. Educational Research Review is a publication of Elsevier.

Full text is availabe on Science Direct: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.edurev.2010.07.004

Keywords

Cited By

View References & Citations Map

These links are based on references which have been extracted automatically and may have some errors. If you see a mistake, please contact info@learntechlib.org.