A study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - LEED

This paper presents ongoing research aimed at investigating the efficacy of computer animations in improving college students’ learning of building sustainability concepts and practices. The use of animations in educational contexts is not new, however scientific evidence that supports their effecti...

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Main Authors: Razieh Nilforooshan, Nicoletta Adamo-Villani, Hazar Dib
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Alliance for Innovation (EAI) 2013-10-01
Series:EAI Endorsed Transactions on e-Learning
Subjects:
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spelling doaj-9060ea9d9a1148499d66cd0adfbc9f382020-11-25T01:38:18ZengEuropean Alliance for Innovation (EAI)EAI Endorsed Transactions on e-Learning2032-92532013-10-01131910.4108/el.1.3.e3A study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - LEEDRazieh Nilforooshan0Nicoletta Adamo-Villani1Hazar Dib2Purdue University, Department of Computer Graphics Technology, West Lafayette, IN, 47907Purdue University, Department of Computer Graphics Technology, West Lafayette, IN, 47907Purdue University, Department of Building Construction Management, West Lafayette, IN, 47907This paper presents ongoing research aimed at investigating the efficacy of computer animations in improving college students’ learning of building sustainability concepts and practices. The use of animations in educational contexts is not new, however scientific evidence that supports their effectiveness as educational materials is still limited. This paper reports an experiment that explored the impact of an educational digital animation, called “LEED-ERS”, on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating system. Specifically, the animation focused on the LEED category of Sustainable Site. Results of a study with 68 students show that viewing the animation led to an increase in subjects’ declarative knowledge by 15%. Compared to traditional learning methods (e.g. reading assignments with static images), viewing the animation led to significantly higher declarative knowledge gains.computer animationengineering educationLEEDe-learningbuilding sustainability
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Razieh Nilforooshan
Nicoletta Adamo-Villani
Hazar Dib
spellingShingle Razieh Nilforooshan
Nicoletta Adamo-Villani
Hazar Dib
A study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - LEED
EAI Endorsed Transactions on e-Learning
computer animation
engineering education
LEED
e-learning
building sustainability
author_facet Razieh Nilforooshan
Nicoletta Adamo-Villani
Hazar Dib
author_sort Razieh Nilforooshan
title A study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - LEED
title_short A study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - LEED
title_full A study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - LEED
title_fullStr A study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - LEED
title_full_unstemmed A study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design - LEED
title_sort study of the effects of computer animation on college students’ learning of leadership in energy and environmental design - leed
publisher European Alliance for Innovation (EAI)
series EAI Endorsed Transactions on e-Learning
issn 2032-9253
publishDate 2013-10-01
description This paper presents ongoing research aimed at investigating the efficacy of computer animations in improving college students’ learning of building sustainability concepts and practices. The use of animations in educational contexts is not new, however scientific evidence that supports their effectiveness as educational materials is still limited. This paper reports an experiment that explored the impact of an educational digital animation, called “LEED-ERS”, on college students’ learning of Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating system. Specifically, the animation focused on the LEED category of Sustainable Site. Results of a study with 68 students show that viewing the animation led to an increase in subjects’ declarative knowledge by 15%. Compared to traditional learning methods (e.g. reading assignments with static images), viewing the animation led to significantly higher declarative knowledge gains.
topic computer animation
engineering education
LEED
e-learning
building sustainability
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