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The Effects of a Computer-Assisted Teaching Material, Designed According to the ASSURE Instructional Design and the ARCS Model of Motivation, on Students’ Achievement Levels in a Mathematics Lesson and Their Resulting Attitudes
Author(s) -
Hilal Karakis,
Ayşen Karamete,
Aydin Okçu
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
european journal of contemporary education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.517
H-Index - 14
eISSN - 2305-6746
pISSN - 2304-9650
DOI - 10.13187/ejced.2016.15.105
Subject(s) - mathematics education , wilcoxon signed rank test , test (biology) , computer assisted instruction , achievement test , instructional design , likert scale , rank (graph theory) , teaching method , computer science , software , mathematics , psychology , pedagogy , standardized test , curriculum , paleontology , statistics , combinatorics , biology , programming language
This study examined the effects that computer-assisted instruction had on students‘ attitudes toward a mathematics lesson and toward learning mathematics with computer-assisted instruction. The computer software we used was based on the ASSURE Instructional Systems Design and the ARCS Model of Motivation, and the software was designed to teach fractions to fourth-grade students. The skill levels of these students were gauged before and after receiving the computer-assisted instruction. We structured our experimental design to use one group for both preand post-tests, which is considered to be one of the weak experimental designs. We conducted our research with 28 students studying in Balikesir, Turkey, for a period of six weeks, using the specifically developed teaching material. We gathered our research data by applying an attitude scale to our mathematics lesson and to computer-assisted instruction. We also applied the Academic Achievement Test for Fractions Unit in Mathematics, a test we developed for our research. We analyzed our gathered data with the Wilcoxon Signed-Rank Test (n 0.05). Based on the research results, we believe that similar materials can also be used for instructing other topics of mathematics, and similar computer-assisted activities can be developed for other courses.

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