Recent research has demonstrated instruction that includes gesture can greatly impact the learning of certain mathematics tasks for children and much of this work relies on face-to-face instruction. We extend the work on this problem by asking how gesture in instruction impacts adult learning from a video production for a science concept. Borrowing from research by Perry and Elder (1997), the research presented here examines what role adding gesture to instruction plays for adults learning about gear movement. In this pretest-instruction-posttest design, 56 college-aged participants were asked to complete problems relating to gear movement. Participants viewed either an instructional video in which an instructor used speech only (control) or speech-plus-gesture (experimental) to explain a fundamental principle in the physics of gear movement. Results showed that adults who knew less actually learned more and that instruction was effective, but significantly more effective when gesture was added. These findings shed light on the role of gesture input in adult learning and carry implications for how gesture may be utilized in asynchronous instruction with adults.
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Cited by (18)
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Choi, Yoon-Sung
2024. Descriptive Characteristics of Systematic Functional Gestures Used by Pre-Service Earth Science Teachers in Classroom Learning Environments. Journal of the Korean earth science society 45:4 ► pp. 377 ff.
Church, R. Breckinridge, Michelle Perry, Melissa A. Singer, Susan Wagner Cook & Martha Wagner Alibali
2024. Teachers’ Gestures and How They Matter. Topics in Cognitive Science
Goldin‐Meadow, Susan
2024. The Mind Hidden in Our Hands. Topics in Cognitive Science
Li, Wenjing, Ziyi Kuang, Xiaoxue Leng, Richard E. Mayer & Fuxing Wang
2024. Role of Gesturing Onscreen Instructors in Video Lectures: A Set of Three-level Meta-analyses on the Embodiment Effect. Educational Psychology Review 36:3
Beege, Maik, Noah L. Schroeder, Steffi Heidig, Günter Daniel Rey & Sascha Schneider
2023. The instructor presence effect and its moderators in instructional video: A series of meta-analyses. Educational Research Review 41 ► pp. 100564 ff.
Parrill, Fey, Jeffrey J. Shymanski & Susan Wagner Cook
2023. Using the hands to learn about the brain: Testing action‐based instruction in brain anatomy. Applied Cognitive Psychology 37:5 ► pp. 967 ff.
Alemdag, Ecenaz
2022. Effects of instructor-present videos on learning, cognitive load, motivation, and social presence: A meta-analysis. Education and Information Technologies 27:9 ► pp. 12713 ff.
Ping, Raedy, Fey Parrill, Ruth Breckinridge Church & Susan Goldin-Meadow
2022. Teaching stereoisomers through gesture, action, and mental imagery. Chemistry Education Research and Practice 23:3 ► pp. 698 ff.
Guilbert, Daniel, Naomi Sweller & Penny Van Bergen
2021. Emotion and gesture effects on narrative recall in young children and adults. Applied Cognitive Psychology 35:4 ► pp. 873 ff.
2021. Lending a hand to storytelling: Gesture’s effects on narrative comprehension moderated by task difficulty and cognitive ability. Quarterly Journal of Experimental Psychology 74:10 ► pp. 1791 ff.
Reuter, Timo & Miriam Leuchter
2021. Children's concepts of gears and their promotion through play. Journal of Research in Science Teaching 58:1 ► pp. 69 ff.
Wang, Jixin, Tingting Liu & Xuan Wang
2020. Human hand gesture recognition with convolutional neural networks for K-12 double-teachers instruction mode classroom. Infrared Physics & Technology 111 ► pp. 103464 ff.
Lubrick, Mark, George Zhou & Jingsheng Zhang
2019. Is the Future Bright? The Potential of Lightboard Videos for Student Achievement and Engagement in Learning. EURASIA Journal of Mathematics, Science and Technology Education 15:8
Parrill, Fey, Alison McKim & Kimberly Grogan
2019. Gesturing standard deviation: Gestures undergraduate students use in describing their concepts of standard deviation. The Journal of Mathematical Behavior 53 ► pp. 1 ff.
Cook, Susan Wagner
2018. Enhancing learning with hand gestures: Potential mechanisms [Psychology of Learning and Motivation, 69], ► pp. 107 ff.
Rueckert, Linda, Ruth Breckinridge Church, Andrea Avila & Theresa Trejo
2017. Gesture enhances learning of a complex statistical concept. Cognitive Research: Principles and Implications 2:1
Abels, Simone
2016. The role of gestures in a teacher–student-discourse about atoms. Chemistry Education Research and Practice 17:3 ► pp. 618 ff.
Senior, Carl
2016. Innovation in education. Commentary: Teaching statistics using dance and movement and a case for neuroscience in mathematics education. Frontiers in Psychology 7
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