ByrdNick,
@ByrdNick@nerdculture.de avatar

Do students learn better if instructors share slides?

An experiment gave students no access, partial access, or full access to instructor’s slides. Access didn’t significantly help.

When controlling for other factors, “bringing slides to class negatively impacted …exam performance” in two of three units (R < -.2). It never helped.

And “using slides to study” never helped (above and beyond other factors).

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2015.02.002

image/jpeg

ttpphd,
@ttpphd@mastodon.social avatar

@ByrdNick

Providing slides helps when students are not in class. If the participant groups are both equally likely to attend class, then this important detail is missed if the metric is, "does bringing slides to class improve test scores?".

If there is no harm in providing increased access, I say do it regardless of whether you think it'll improve test scores. That's why I recorded and shared each class lecture on a web portal, so students had more flexibility engaging the material.

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