Author/Authors :
Florence Martin، نويسنده , , James D. Klein and Howard Sullivan، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
This study investigated the effects of several elements of instruction (objectives,
information, practice, examples and review) when they were combined in a
systematic manner. College students enrolled in a computer literacy course
used one of six different versions of a computer-based lesson delivered on the
web to learn about input, processing, storage and output of a computer. The
six versions of the program consisted of (1) a full version that contained
information plus objectives, practice with feedback, examples and review, (2)
a version without objectives, (3) one without examples, (4) one without
practice, (5) one without review and (6) a lean version containing information
only. Results indicated participants who used one of the four versions of the
computer program that included practice performed significantly better on the
posttest and had consistently more positive attitudes than those who did not
receive practice. Implications for the development of computer-based
instruction are explored