ABSTRACT Over the past two decades, digital flashcards – that is, computer programmes, smartphone apps, and online services that mimic, and potentially improve upon, the capabilities of traditional paper flashcards – have grown in variety and popularity. Many digital flashcard platforms allow learners to make or use flashcards from a variety of sources and customise the way in which flashcards are used. Yet relatively little is known about why and how students actually use digital flashcards during self-regulated learning, and whether such uses are supported by research from the science of learning. To address these questions, we conducted a large survey of undergraduate students (n = 901) at a major U.S. university. The survey revealed insights into the popularity, acquisition, and usage of digital flashcards, beliefs about how digital flashcards are to be used during self-regulated learning, and differences in uses of paper versus digital flashcards, all of which have implications for the optimisation of student learning. Overall, our results suggest that college students commonly use digital flashcards in a manner that only partially reflects evidence-based learning principles, and as such, the pedagogical potential of digital flashcards remains to be fully realised.
How do college students use digital flashcards during self-regulated learning?
I. Zung,Megan N. Imundo,Steven C. Pan
Published 2022 in Memory
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2022
- Venue
Memory
- Publication date
2022-04-07
- Fields of study
Medicine, Computer Science, Education, Psychology
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
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