Bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the Web of Science Core Collection published from 2000 to 2019
Purpose: This study analyzed the bibliometric characteristics of flipped classroom publications in the Social Science Citation Index and Science Citation Index Expanded from 2000 to 2019. Methods: The terms related to “flipped classroom” and “inverted learning” were the keywords for searching journa...
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Korean Council of Science Editors
2020-08-01
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Online Access: | http://www.escienceediting.org/journal/view.php?doi=10.6087/kcse.212 |
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doaj-5a378a601b384e7683d278e42f50118d2021-09-02T11:32:19ZengKorean Council of Science EditorsScience Editing2288-80632288-74742020-08-017216316810.6087/kcse.212Bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the Web of Science Core Collection published from 2000 to 2019Tsai, Hsin-LuenWu, Jia-FenPurpose: This study analyzed the bibliometric characteristics of flipped classroom publications in the Social Science Citation Index and Science Citation Index Expanded from 2000 to 2019. Methods: The terms related to “flipped classroom” and “inverted learning” were the keywords for searching journal articles on January 3, 2020. Results: There are 645 articles (including 33 early-access articles), representing 1,938 authors in the 210 journals scanned. The United States, China, and Taiwan were three leading countries/regions in this field. In the top 10 countries, to 10 institutions, the top eight most-cited journals were identified by either the number of publications or the number of citations. Hot-spot themes from the 24 highly-cited articles and author keyword co-occurrence analysis focus on empirical research in the flipped classroom, the overall feasibility of the flipped classroom course design and practical model, and students’ performances, and student-regulated learning (active learning and readiness) outcomes. Conclusion: TThe results indicate that the United States dominated flipped classroom research, originating most of the highly-cited articles, having more prolific authors, and presenting the most-cited institutions. Furthermore, little research has been undertaken into arriving at an understanding of evidentiary effectiveness or consistency in a flipped classroom. Based on the trends identified, we need a call for more specific types of research into the effectiveness of flipped classroom studies and systematic reviews.http://www.escienceediting.org/journal/view.php?doi=10.6087/kcse.212 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Tsai, Hsin-Luen Wu, Jia-Fen |
spellingShingle |
Tsai, Hsin-Luen Wu, Jia-Fen Bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the Web of Science Core Collection published from 2000 to 2019 Science Editing |
author_facet |
Tsai, Hsin-Luen Wu, Jia-Fen |
author_sort |
Tsai, Hsin-Luen |
title |
Bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the Web of Science Core Collection published from 2000 to 2019 |
title_short |
Bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the Web of Science Core Collection published from 2000 to 2019 |
title_full |
Bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the Web of Science Core Collection published from 2000 to 2019 |
title_fullStr |
Bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the Web of Science Core Collection published from 2000 to 2019 |
title_full_unstemmed |
Bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the Web of Science Core Collection published from 2000 to 2019 |
title_sort |
bibliometric analysis of flipped classroom publications from the web of science core collection published from 2000 to 2019 |
publisher |
Korean Council of Science Editors |
series |
Science Editing |
issn |
2288-8063 2288-7474 |
publishDate |
2020-08-01 |
description |
Purpose: This study analyzed the bibliometric characteristics of flipped classroom publications in the Social Science Citation Index and Science Citation Index Expanded from 2000 to 2019. Methods: The terms related to “flipped classroom” and “inverted learning” were the keywords for searching journal articles on January 3, 2020. Results: There are 645 articles (including 33 early-access articles), representing 1,938 authors in the 210 journals scanned. The United States, China, and Taiwan were three leading countries/regions in this field. In the top 10 countries, to 10 institutions, the top eight most-cited journals were identified by either the number of publications or the number of citations. Hot-spot themes from the 24 highly-cited articles and author keyword co-occurrence analysis focus on empirical research in the flipped classroom, the overall feasibility of the flipped classroom course design and practical model, and students’ performances, and student-regulated learning (active learning and readiness) outcomes. Conclusion: TThe results indicate that the United States dominated flipped classroom research, originating most of the highly-cited articles, having more prolific authors, and presenting the most-cited institutions. Furthermore, little research has been undertaken into arriving at an understanding of evidentiary effectiveness or consistency in a flipped classroom. Based on the trends identified, we need a call for more specific types of research into the effectiveness of flipped classroom studies and systematic reviews. |
url |
http://www.escienceediting.org/journal/view.php?doi=10.6087/kcse.212 |
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AT tsaihsinluen bibliometricanalysisofflippedclassroompublicationsfromthewebofsciencecorecollectionpublishedfrom2000to2019 AT wujiafen bibliometricanalysisofflippedclassroompublicationsfromthewebofsciencecorecollectionpublishedfrom2000to2019 |
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