The effects of static and dynamic visual representations as aids for primary school children in tasks of auditory discrimination of sound patterns. An intervention-based study

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Abstract

It has been proposed that non-conventional presentations of visual information could be very useful as a scaffolding strategy in the learning of Western music notation. As a result, this study has attempted to determine if there is any effect of static and dynamic presentation modes of visual information in the recognition of sound patterns. An intervention-based quasiexperimental design was adopted with two groups of fifth-grade students in a Spanish city. Students did tasks involving discrimination, auditory recognition and symbolic association of the sound patterns with non-musical representations, either static images (S group), or dynamic images (D group). The results showed neither statistically significant differences in the scores of D and S, nor influence of the covariates on the dependent variable, although statistically significant intra-group differences were found for both groups. This suggests that both types of graphic formats could be effective as digital learning mediators in the learning of Western musical notation.

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Tejada, J., & Serra, D. (2018). The effects of static and dynamic visual representations as aids for primary school children in tasks of auditory discrimination of sound patterns. An intervention-based study. International Journal of Emerging Technologies in Learning, 13(2), 60–71. https://doi.org/10.3991/ijet.v13i02.7430

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