Smart Technology for Sustainable Curriculum: Using Drone to Support Young Students’ Learning

The study developed a sustainable curriculum in which one smart technology (drone) was employed to inspire student learning. The study investigated the effect of using drones on the development of students’ spatial visualization and sequencing skills and examined related instructional task...

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Main Author: Pao-Nan Chou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-10-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/10/3819
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spelling doaj-f09170a138254795a8ca0faba52b78012020-11-24T21:23:14ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502018-10-011010381910.3390/su10103819su10103819Smart Technology for Sustainable Curriculum: Using Drone to Support Young Students’ LearningPao-Nan Chou0Department of Education, National University of Tainan, Tainan 70005, TaiwanThe study developed a sustainable curriculum in which one smart technology (drone) was employed to inspire student learning. The study investigated the effect of using drones on the development of students’ spatial visualization and sequencing skills and examined related instructional tasks for drone use in the classroom. An after-school drone-flying program was developed at a public elementary school in Taiwan, with 10 third-grade students voluntarily participating in a six-week educational experiment. During drone programming training, young children used a visual block programming language on tablet computers to code lightweight drones. A two-phase research model was adopted to collect the necessary information. In the first phase of the model, a design-based research methodology facilitated the overall instruction preparation process for the four-week workshops. The second phase of the model emphasized a mixed-method research approach, employing a quasi-experimental pretest and post-test design to analyze the effect of drone use and a qualitative method to observe students’ learning behavior and programming work. The results showed that drone programming significantly improved students’ learning of spatial visualization and sequencing skills. Gender, as a potential variable, only influenced students’ programming patterns. Specific programming styles, learning behaviors, and instructional design issues were identified for further discussion.http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/10/3819sustainable curriculumdrones in educationchildren’s programmingspatial visualization
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pao-Nan Chou
spellingShingle Pao-Nan Chou
Smart Technology for Sustainable Curriculum: Using Drone to Support Young Students’ Learning
Sustainability
sustainable curriculum
drones in education
children’s programming
spatial visualization
author_facet Pao-Nan Chou
author_sort Pao-Nan Chou
title Smart Technology for Sustainable Curriculum: Using Drone to Support Young Students’ Learning
title_short Smart Technology for Sustainable Curriculum: Using Drone to Support Young Students’ Learning
title_full Smart Technology for Sustainable Curriculum: Using Drone to Support Young Students’ Learning
title_fullStr Smart Technology for Sustainable Curriculum: Using Drone to Support Young Students’ Learning
title_full_unstemmed Smart Technology for Sustainable Curriculum: Using Drone to Support Young Students’ Learning
title_sort smart technology for sustainable curriculum: using drone to support young students’ learning
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2018-10-01
description The study developed a sustainable curriculum in which one smart technology (drone) was employed to inspire student learning. The study investigated the effect of using drones on the development of students’ spatial visualization and sequencing skills and examined related instructional tasks for drone use in the classroom. An after-school drone-flying program was developed at a public elementary school in Taiwan, with 10 third-grade students voluntarily participating in a six-week educational experiment. During drone programming training, young children used a visual block programming language on tablet computers to code lightweight drones. A two-phase research model was adopted to collect the necessary information. In the first phase of the model, a design-based research methodology facilitated the overall instruction preparation process for the four-week workshops. The second phase of the model emphasized a mixed-method research approach, employing a quasi-experimental pretest and post-test design to analyze the effect of drone use and a qualitative method to observe students’ learning behavior and programming work. The results showed that drone programming significantly improved students’ learning of spatial visualization and sequencing skills. Gender, as a potential variable, only influenced students’ programming patterns. Specific programming styles, learning behaviors, and instructional design issues were identified for further discussion.
topic sustainable curriculum
drones in education
children’s programming
spatial visualization
url http://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/10/10/3819
work_keys_str_mv AT paonanchou smarttechnologyforsustainablecurriculumusingdronetosupportyoungstudentslearning
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