A Randomized Experiment Testing the Efficacy of a Scheduling Nudge in a Massive Open Online Course (MOOC)
Author(s) -
Rachel Baker,
Brent J. Evans,
Thomas S. Dee
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
aera open
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2332-8584
DOI - 10.1177/2332858416674007
Subject(s) - massive open online course , psychology , psychological intervention , persistence (discontinuity) , randomized experiment , random assignment , academic achievement , student engagement , scheduling (production processes) , peer effects , social psychology , mathematics education , geotechnical engineering , mathematics , pathology , psychiatry , engineering , economics , medicine , statistics , operations management
An increasing number of students are taking classes offered online through open-access platforms; however, the vast majority of students who start these classes do not finish. The incongruence of student intentions and subsequent engagement suggests that self-control is a major contributor to this stark lack of persistence. This study presents the results of a large-scale field experiment (N = 18,043) that examines the effects of a self-directed scheduling nudge designed to promote student persistence in a massive open online course. We find that random assignment to treatment had no effects on near-term engagement and weakly significant negative effects on longer-term course engagement, persistence, and performance. Interestingly, these negative effects are highly concentrated in two groups of students: those who registered close to the first day of class and those with .edu e-mail addresses. We consider several explanations for these findings and conclude that theoretically motivated interventions may interact with the diverse motivations of individual students in possibly unintended ways
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