Study Finds Use of Video Boosts Learning

A meta-study has found that the use of pre-recorded video can lead to "small improvements" in learning and replacing existing content with videos can result in "strong" learning benefits.

The work, published by the American Educational Research Association (AERA), was undertaken by a team of researchers from Australian Catholic University (ACU) and the University of Queensland. They analyzed 105 prior studies that covered a pool sample of 7,776 students. Those studies had used randomized controlled trials to compare the effectiveness of videos (both recorded lectures and highly edited clips with audio and visual elements) against other forms of instruction, including face-to-face lectures, tutorials or assigned readings. What the project didn't include were those studies where video usage couldn't be isolated from other variables, such as in the adoption of "flipped" classrooms.

Videos were found to be more effective for teaching skills than for transmitting knowledge (an increase of five points versus two points). According to the research, this may be because video provides "a different, more authentic perspective." For instance, the report noted, while learning about the history of feminism in India may show no difference in impact between sitting in class or viewing a video, video has the advantage for other topics, such as learning a medical procedure or a new skill. "Videos allow for students to see authentic demonstrations of skills with real people. They also allow for unique perspectives where students can see a skill through the eyes of the performer," the report stated.

The researchers called the results "robust" across different settings (lectures or tutorials), subjects (such as science or languages), types of video (for example, demonstrations or recorded lectures), video lengths and follow-up periods for assessment.

Overall, when students watched videos instead of going through "the usual forms of teaching," the average grade rose from a B to a B+. "When they got videos in addition to their existing classes, the effect was even stronger, moving students from a B to an A," said Michael Noetel, a research fellow at ACU, in a statement. "In a slightly concerning finding for my job as an academic, videos were even better than face-to-face classes with a teacher, although only by a little."

The authors explained that videos might be more effective than face-to-face classes with comparable interactivity for a couple of reasons: 1) Students can manage "their own cognitive load" by being able to pause and rewind; and, 2) "Teachers can better optimize cognitive load through editing." Those theories couldn't be tested, however, because too few studies reported on whether the video was self-paced or edited.

The report urged colleges to encourage staff to create and share high-quality video resources by providing stipends, funding the infrastructure for creating quality videos and supporting those students who had less access to technology.

"Even after the pandemic ends, college instructors will find value in incorporating video into their teaching," said Noetel. "Ensuring that those videos are of high quality and that all students have equal access to them will provide significant long-term benefits."

This study was partially supported by a grant from ACU.

The report is openly available in the Review of Educational Research, a peer-reviewed journal of AERA.

About the Author

Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.

Featured

  • student reading a book with a brain, a protective hand, a computer monitor showing education icons, gears, and leaves

    4 Steps to Responsible AI Implementation

    Researchers at the University of Kansas Center for Innovation, Design & Digital Learning (CIDDL) have published a new framework for the responsible implementation of artificial intelligence at all levels of education.

  • three glowing stacks of tech-themed icons

    Research: LLMs Need a Translation Layer to Launch Complex Cyber Attacks

    While large language models have been touted for their potential in cybersecurity, they are still far from executing real-world cyber attacks — unless given help from a new kind of abstraction layer, according to researchers at Carnegie Mellon University and Anthropic.

  • Hand holding a stylus over a tablet with futuristic risk management icons

    Why Universities Are Ransomware's Easy Target: Lessons from the 23% Surge

    Academic environments face heightened risk because their collaboration-driven environments are inherently open, making them more susceptible to attack, while the high-value research data they hold makes them an especially attractive target. The question is not if this data will be targeted, but whether universities can defend it swiftly enough against increasingly AI-powered threats.

  • magnifying glass revealing the letters AI

    New Tool Tracks Unauthorized AI Usage Across Organizations

    DevOps platform provider JFrog is taking aim at a growing challenge for enterprises: users deploying AI tools without IT approval.