Lecture Effectiveness - The Research

Earlier today I published the following in the Published Instructor Club, but then I realized that this might be even more useful for those not yet published and planning their courses. So, this is a repeat.

It seems that every instructor on Udemy has an opinion about what makes an effective online presentation, but rarely do we have a discussion about evidence based research. So... I thought I would post some of the research I have found, encourage others to post additional research, and hopefully, instructors (Including myself) can make better informed course creation decisions.

1. https://cft.vanderbilt.edu/guides-sub-pages/effective-educational-videos/

How Video Production Affects Student Engagement: An Empirical Study of MOOC Videos

Key findings:

Findings 1.JPG

2. https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED560520

Seeing the Instructor in Two Video Styles: Preferences and Patterns

Key Findings:

Instructional content designers of online learning platforms are concerned about optimal video design guidelines that ensure course effectiveness, while keeping video production time and costs at reasonable levels. In order to address the concern, we use clickstream data from one Coursera course to analyze the engagement, motivational and navigational patterns of learners upon being presented with lecture videos incorporating the instructor video in two styles--first, where the instructor seamlessly interacts with the content and second, where the instructor appears in a window in a portion of the presentation window. Our main empirical finding is that the video style where the instructor seamlessly interacts with the content is by far the most preferred choice of the learners in general and certificate-earners and auditors in particular. Moreover, learners who chose this video style, on average, watched a larger proportion of the lectures, engaged with the lectures for a longer duration and preferred to view the lectures in streamed mode (as opposed to downloading them), when compared to their colleagues who chose the other video style. We posit that the important difference between the two video modes was the integrated view of a "real" instructor in close proximity to the content, that increased learner motivation, which in turn affected the watching times and the proportion of lectures watched. The results lend further credibility to the previously suggested hypothesis that positive affect arising out of improved social cues of the instructor influences learner motivation leading to their increased engagement with the course and its broader applicability to learning at scale scenarios. [For complete proceedings, see ED560503.]

3. https://www2.le.ac.uk/offices/ld/resources/presentations/delivering-presentation

Delivering an effective presentation

An effective presenter needs to be flexible, energetic and enthusiastic. This guide will help you turn your written presentation into an imaginative public performance.

Your turn.

Lawrence M. Miller
Management & Leadership Coach

Comments

  • Thanks for sharing, great information.

  • this is very helpful, thank you!

  • SharonRamel
    SharonRamel Posts: 1,312 rolemodel rank

    Helpful as always @LawrenceMMiller
    - thank you.

  • Sijal_Ahmed
    Sijal_Ahmed Posts: 247 specialist rank

    Very nice reserach. Thanks for sharing and it is always a great input from your side.

    What do you mean by extemporaneous? Does it mean no prepration at all, or just no written script for the lecture to be recoreded?

  • Great information @LawrenceMMiller
    . I know when I first started out it was difficult to get my head round the shorter is better. It's a wonderful example of being student focused rather than instructor focussed.

  • I think that means speaking like you are talking to human being. If you are confident in your knowledge of your material, and if have learned to look into the lens of a camera, you can develop the skill of speaking like you are speaking to "me."

  • This is very helpful and interesting. And I attest to the first point! My least dropped lectures with %100 watch rate are always the shorter ones.
    I'm also happy to learn that a more relaxed, personal background can be more engaging, since I haven't yet figured out how to properly light a green screen!

  • Sijal_Ahmed
    Sijal_Ahmed Posts: 247 specialist rank

    There are some topics which you can break into multiple parts. And you can them within 6 min limit.

    Lets say you are teaching some coding excercise or some design software. For example you are making a cad model of car. How you will break it into multiple lectures? This may loose continuity of what is being explained!

  • Hey thanks for sharing. This is really helpful and inspirational. Keep up the greatness!

  • Great stuff! Thanks.

  • Nice post, thanks for that!

  • Thanks, Lawrence. This is very helpful.

    However, I have a question about the two video styles. I'm not certain what seamlessly interacting with the content means. Does it mean that the instructor always appears on the screen? My courses are mostly videos of me speaking but sometimes cut to photos with me out of the picture or cut to slides with key points but with me in the screen but in a smaller window. It seems to work well, in part because it adds some variety.

    Could you clarify this point?

    Thanks,

    Roger Allen

  • @RogerKayAllen
    Of course, I am not the author of the study, so your guess as to the meaning of "seamlessly interacting" is as good as mine. I suspect you are correct. I do basically the same.

  • @LawrenceMMiller
    Thank you so much for sharing these precious tips

  • Thanks. I had decided to continue what I've been doing. It seems to work well by adding some variety. I appreciate you sharing this research.

  • Lizzy
    Lizzy Posts: 162 specialist rank

    Thanks for sharing @LawrenceMMiller

    There's a lot of great content in the research and your helpful summary. It's a goldmine actually. I am a bit concerned that some of my videos are 15+ minutes and engagement might dwindle. The problem is that I have a teaching point and I don't know how long it will take until after I have finished. I will try to control video length for future courses though. I live and learn.

  • Thanks @LawrenceMMiller
    , once again a highly practical and helpful post of yours! And also a good reminder to focus on what proves to be right, instead of overthinking it.

  • Thanks for sharing, very helpful!

  • Great!

  • Thank you for sharing this valuable information.

  • Shigeru_M
    Shigeru_M Posts: 752 rolemodel rank

    Thanks Lawrence!

    Can I share it with Japanese community, too?

    Best regards

    Shigeru Masukawa

  • LawrenceMMiller
    LawrenceMMiller Posts: 2,296 rolemodel rank

    Of course. why not?

  • Quality insight to have, as I myself was a student before becoming an instructor and these findings were true to my preference to using Udemy for training. Short and sweet is the key.