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      When static media promote active learning: annotated illustrations versus narrated animations in multimedia instruction.

      Journal of Experimental Psychology. Applied
      Adolescent, Adult, Books, Illustrated, Educational Technology, instrumentation, Humans, Learning, Mass Media, Narration, Retention (Psychology)

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          Abstract

          In 4 experiments, students received a lesson consisting of computer-based animation and narration or a lesson consisting of paper-based static diagrams and text. The lessons used the same words and graphics in the paper-based and computer-based versions to explain the process of lightning formation (Experiment 1), how a toilet tank works (Experiment 2), how ocean waves work (Experiment 3), and how a car's braking system works (Experiment 4). On subsequent retention and transfer tests, the paper group performed significantly better than the computer group on 4 of 8 comparisons, and there was no significant difference on the rest. These results support the static media hypothesis, in which static illustrations with printed text reduce extraneous processing and promote germane processing as compared with narrated animations.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          16393035
          10.1037/1076-898X.11.4.256

          Chemistry
          Adolescent,Adult,Books, Illustrated,Educational Technology,instrumentation,Humans,Learning,Mass Media,Narration,Retention (Psychology)

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