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Teaching with Instructional Video
Teaching with Instructional Video
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Author(s): Mayer, Richard E.
ISBN No.: 9781009776684
Year: 202606
Format: Trade Cloth (Hard Cover)
Price: $ 51.80
Dispatch delay: Dispatched between 7 to 15 days
Status: Available (Forthcoming)

About the author; Preface; Acknowledgements; Part I. Introduction: 1. Introduction to instructional video; 2. Historical foundations of instructional video; 3. Research methods for studying teaching with instructional video; 4. Theories of teaching with instructional video; Part II. Engage: Principles to Motivate Learners to Exert Effort to Learn: 5. Personalization principle: instructor uses conversational wording; 6.


Voice principle: off-screen instructor speaks in an appealing human-sounding voice; 7. Embodiment principle: on-screen instructor draws while lecturing; 8. Perspective principle: demonstrations are recorded from a first-person perspective; 9. Positivity principle: on-screen instructor displays positive gestures and voice while lecturing; 10. Eye contact principle: on-screen instructor makes eye contact with the audience while lecturing; 11. Emotional design principle: key on-screen elements are visually appealing; Part III. Focus: Principles to Help Learners Focus on Relevant Information: 12. Simplicity principle: extraneous words and graphics are weeded out; 13.


Visual signaling principle: instructor points to key visual elements while lecturing; 14. Caption principle: captions are added to a narrated video only under special circumstances; Part IV. Manage: Principles to Help Learners Manage the Flow of Relevant Information: 15. Segmenting principle: complex slides are presented by progressively adding parts; 16. Pretraining principle: names and characteristics of key terms are provided before the video; 17. Modality principle: words are spoken rather than printed; Part V. Connect: Principles to Help Learners Build Connections Between Corresponding Verbal and Visual Information: 18. Multimedia principle: video and narration are presented rather than narration alone; 19.


Contiguity principle: printed text is placed next to the corresponding visual element; 20. Synchrony principle: attention is drawn to the visual element that the instructor's voice is talking about; Part VI. Assimilate: Principles to Help Learners Actively Make Sense of Incoming Information: 21. Notetaking principle: learners are prompted to take summary notes while viewing an instructional video; 22. Explaining principle: learners are prompted to generate verbal explanations during pauses in an instructional video; Part VII. Conclusion: 23. Summary of design principles for teaching with instructional video.


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