The purpose of this study was to investigate whether supporting sixth grade students to monitor and regulate their group navigation behavior while reading from hypertext would lead to a rich understanding of domain knowledge. Metanavigation support in the form of prompts was provided to groups of students who collaboratively used a hypertext system called CoMPASS to complete a design challenge. Multilevel analysis techniques were used to understand how the provision of metanavigation support to groups interact with group navigation behavior and learner's metacognitive awareness of reading strategies to affect individual learning. The findings of this study revealed that providing metanavigation support to the groups contributed positively in enabling students to gain a rich understanding of domain knowledge. Our findings also indicate that there was a significant negative interaction of students' metacognitive awareness and perceived use of reading strategies and the presence of metanavigation support while interacting with hypertext.
CITATION STYLE
Stylianou-Georgiou, A., Papanastasiou, E., & Puntambekar, S. (2011). Analyzing Collaborative Processes and Learning from Hypertext Through Hierarchical Linear Modelling. In Analyzing Interactions in CSCL (pp. 145–159). Springer US. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4419-7710-6_7
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