The effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept maps

Abstract The advancement of technology has made it possible for automated feedback to be added to learning activities such as the construction of concept maps. The addition of feedback allows learners to acquire new knowledge instead of only focusing on reviewed knowledge. The cognitive processes fo...

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Main Authors: Pedro Gabriel Fonteles Furtado, Tsukasa Hirashima, Yusuke Hayashi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-11-01
Series:Research and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41039-019-0108-1
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spelling doaj-23404fe4df9740dc8de24e4364af38f12020-11-25T04:08:09ZengSpringerOpenResearch and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning1793-70782019-11-0114111410.1186/s41039-019-0108-1The effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept mapsPedro Gabriel Fonteles Furtado0Tsukasa Hirashima1Yusuke Hayashi2Department of Information Engineering, Hiroshima UniversityDepartment of Information Engineering, Hiroshima UniversityDepartment of Information Engineering, Hiroshima UniversityAbstract The advancement of technology has made it possible for automated feedback to be added to learning activities such as the construction of concept maps. The addition of feedback allows learners to acquire new knowledge instead of only focusing on reviewed knowledge. The cognitive processes for acquiring new knowledge and reviewing knowledge are different, so the benefits of concept maps in past research may not apply to the acquisition of new knowledge. However, how concept map construction varies across these two aspects has not been investigated. This research starts this investigation by researching how the positioning task affects new knowledge and reviewed knowledge. The position task is the act of deciding and managing the position of the elements of the concept map. In this paper, we study the differences in new knowledge and reviewed knowledge across two closed concept map interfaces by comparing test answers. One interface, Kit-build, includes the positioning task. The other interface, Airmap, does not include it. Results suggest that the interfaces only differ in retained reviewed knowledge, having similar performance in immediate new knowledge, immediate reviewed knowledge, and retained new knowledge. Results have potential implications for the general presence of the positioning task in learning interfaces.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41039-019-0108-1Concept mapClosed concept mapAutomated layout
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pedro Gabriel Fonteles Furtado
Tsukasa Hirashima
Yusuke Hayashi
spellingShingle Pedro Gabriel Fonteles Furtado
Tsukasa Hirashima
Yusuke Hayashi
The effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept maps
Research and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning
Concept map
Closed concept map
Automated layout
author_facet Pedro Gabriel Fonteles Furtado
Tsukasa Hirashima
Yusuke Hayashi
author_sort Pedro Gabriel Fonteles Furtado
title The effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept maps
title_short The effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept maps
title_full The effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept maps
title_fullStr The effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept maps
title_full_unstemmed The effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept maps
title_sort effect on new knowledge and reviewed knowledge caused by the positioning task in closed concept maps
publisher SpringerOpen
series Research and Practice in Technology Enhanced Learning
issn 1793-7078
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Abstract The advancement of technology has made it possible for automated feedback to be added to learning activities such as the construction of concept maps. The addition of feedback allows learners to acquire new knowledge instead of only focusing on reviewed knowledge. The cognitive processes for acquiring new knowledge and reviewing knowledge are different, so the benefits of concept maps in past research may not apply to the acquisition of new knowledge. However, how concept map construction varies across these two aspects has not been investigated. This research starts this investigation by researching how the positioning task affects new knowledge and reviewed knowledge. The position task is the act of deciding and managing the position of the elements of the concept map. In this paper, we study the differences in new knowledge and reviewed knowledge across two closed concept map interfaces by comparing test answers. One interface, Kit-build, includes the positioning task. The other interface, Airmap, does not include it. Results suggest that the interfaces only differ in retained reviewed knowledge, having similar performance in immediate new knowledge, immediate reviewed knowledge, and retained new knowledge. Results have potential implications for the general presence of the positioning task in learning interfaces.
topic Concept map
Closed concept map
Automated layout
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s41039-019-0108-1
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