Using virtual reality in electrostatics instruction: The impact of training

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Abstract

Recent years have seen a resurgence of interest in using virtual reality (VR) technology to benefit instruction, especially in physics and related subjects. As VR devices improve and become more widely available, there remains a number of unanswered questions regarding the impact of VR on student learning and how best to use this technology in the classroom. On the topic of electrostatics, for example, a large, controlled, randomized study performed by Smith et al. [A controlled study of stereoscopic virtual reality in freshman electrostatics, Proceedings of the 2017 Physics Education Research Conference, Cincinnati, OH, PER Conference series (2017), pp. 376-37910.1119/perc.2017.pr.089], found that VR-based instruction had an overall negligible impact on student learning compared to videos or images. However, they did find a strong trend for students who reported frequent video game play to learn better from VR than other media. One possible interpretation of this result is that extended videogame play provides a kind of "training"that enables a student to learn more comfortably in the virtual environment. In the present work we consider if a VR training activity that is unrelated to electrostatics can help prepare students to learn electrostatics from subsequent VR instruction. We find that preliminary VR training leads to a small but statistically significant improvement in student performance on our electrostatics assessment. We also find that student reported game play is still correlated with higher scores on this metric

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APA

Porter, C. D., Smith, J. R. H., Stagar, E. M., Simmons, A., Nieberding, M., Orban, C. M., … Ayers, A. (2020). Using virtual reality in electrostatics instruction: The impact of training. Physical Review Physics Education Research, 16(2). https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.16.020119

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