Influential Article Review - A Research on the Effects of the Availability of Readings to School Attendance and Lecture Capture Success

Authors

  • Andre Young
  • Elbert Stephens
  • Pam Rhodes

Keywords:

Lecture capture, Lecture recording, Student attainment, Lecture attendance

Abstract

This paper examines education. We present insights from a highly influential paper. Here are the highlights from this paper: Lecture capture is widely used within higher education as a means of recording lecture material for online student viewing. However, there is some uncertainty around whether this is a uniformly positive development for students. The current study examines the impact of lecture capture introduction and usage in a compulsory second year research methods module in a undergraduate BSc degree. Data collected from a matched cohort before (N = 161) and after (N = 160) lecture capture introduction showed that attendance substantially dropped in three matched lectures after capture became available. Attendance, which predicts higher attainment (controlling for students’ previous grade and gender), mediates a negative relationship between lecture capture availability and attainment. Lecture capture viewing shows no significant relationship with attainment whilst factoring in lecture attendance; capture viewing also fails to compensate for the impact that low attendance has on attainment. Thus, the net effect of lecture capture introduction on the cohort is generally negative; the study serves as a useful example (that can be communicated students) of the pitfalls of an over-reliance on lecture capture as a replacement for lecture attendance. For our overseas readers, we then present the insights from this paper in Spanish, French, Portuguese, and German.

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Published

2019-12-09

How to Cite

Young, A., Stephens, E., & Rhodes, P. (2019). Influential Article Review - A Research on the Effects of the Availability of Readings to School Attendance and Lecture Capture Success. Journal of Higher Education Theory and Practice, 19(9). Retrieved from https://mail.articlegateway.com/index.php/JHETP/article/view/3302

Issue

Section

Articles