Journal article
Authors list: Endres, Tino; Weyreter, Steffen; Renkl, Alexander; Eitel, Alexander
Publication year: 2020
Pages: 514-525
Journal: Journal of Computer Assisted Learning
Volume number: 36
Issue number: 4
ISSN: 0266-4909
eISSN: 1365-2729
Open access status: Hybrid
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1111/jcal.12418
Publisher: Wiley
Multiple studies have revealed the beneficial effects of emotional design on affective or motivational factors but not often on learning outcomes. We, therefore, tested one important boundary condition: the duration of the learning episode. For the implementation of emotional design, we used the video format of sketched explanation videos, which is particularly popular on online video platforms. We tested the hypothesis that emotional design is beneficial for learning but only in the later phases of studying (sustained learning). This learning benefit is mediated via triggered and maintained situational interest. Seventy-nine students took part in a two-group between-subjects design. Students learned from one of two videos (16 min): either a neutral video that followed cognitive design principles or an emotional-designed video that was based on the neutral video but enriched with emotional design elements (e.g., personalized frame story, warm colours, and tender voice). In line with our hypothesis, the emotional design led to triggered situational interest, leading to a higher maintained situational interest, which in turn fostered performance in the third (final) study phase but not in the two previous ones. Our results suggest that emotional design's positive effects are detectable especially (or only) during prolonged study situations in which motivational factors may play a more critical role. This study thus provides a potential explanation for mixed effects from previous research in this study field. Lay Description What is already known about this topicImplications for practice and/or policyWhat this paper adds Many explanatory videos on video platforms use live sketching as emotional design. Emotional design influences affective or motivational factors in previous studies. These affective effects rarely translated into better learning outcomes. This mixed pattern of results of emotional design suggests boundary conditions. Emotional design improves learning in longer learning sessions. These beneficial effects were driven by situational interest. This process analysis suggests situational interest as an explanatory mechanism. Learning session length seems to explain previously ambiguous result patterns. Live sketching videos can be used to implement emotional design. Emotional design would be of particular benefit in longer-learning sessions. Emotional design is particularly promising in self-guided learning arrangements.
Abstract:
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Endres, T., Weyreter, S., Renkl, A. and Eitel, A. (2020) When and why does emotional design foster learning? Evidence for situational interest as a mediator of increased persistence, Journal of Computer Assisted Learning, 36(4), pp. 514-525. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcal.12418
APA Citation style: Endres, T., Weyreter, S., Renkl, A., & Eitel, A. (2020). When and why does emotional design foster learning? Evidence for situational interest as a mediator of increased persistence. Journal of Computer Assisted Learning. 36(4), 514-525. https://doi.org/10.1111/jcal.12418
Keywords
4-PHASE MODEL; ACHIEVEMENT GOALS; DECORATIVE PICTURES; EMOTIONAL DESIGN; MULTIMEDIA; Multimedia learning; Video-based learning