TY - JOUR
T1 - What motivates university students to like or dislike an educational online video? A sentimental framework
AU - Shoufan, Abdulhadi
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019
PY - 2019/6
Y1 - 2019/6
N2 - Viewers’ rating of educational online videos provides a clue about content quality and is frequently used as filter in video search and recommendation systems. However, it is unclear what motivates students to give a positive or negative rate to an educational video. In the presented study we tried to find out the reasons behind students’ ratings. A total of 51 students were asked to rate a total of 54 YouTube's videos and to write using their own words the reasons for each rating. After cleaning the responses, 1602 and 732 reasoning statements for Like or Dislike ratings were analyzed using group concept mapping, respectively. A sentimental framework could be established consisting of six clusters in this order of significance: explanation, technical presentation, content, voice and language, efficiency, and interestingness. Toward generalizing this framework, we investigated the relationship between the online ratings of the selected videos and the active ratings by our students. We found out that the online liking ratio strongly relates to the liking ratio by our students (R 2 =91.3%). Furthermore, we investigated students’ rating tendencies as function of their performance and gender. We found out that higher-performance students are more likely to like or dislike a video, whereas lower-performance students are less determined. The gender only affected the disliking tendency with female students making more use of the corresponding rate. The findings of the study can help students searching for educational videos as well as producers of such videos towards improved content quality and learning outcomes.
AB - Viewers’ rating of educational online videos provides a clue about content quality and is frequently used as filter in video search and recommendation systems. However, it is unclear what motivates students to give a positive or negative rate to an educational video. In the presented study we tried to find out the reasons behind students’ ratings. A total of 51 students were asked to rate a total of 54 YouTube's videos and to write using their own words the reasons for each rating. After cleaning the responses, 1602 and 732 reasoning statements for Like or Dislike ratings were analyzed using group concept mapping, respectively. A sentimental framework could be established consisting of six clusters in this order of significance: explanation, technical presentation, content, voice and language, efficiency, and interestingness. Toward generalizing this framework, we investigated the relationship between the online ratings of the selected videos and the active ratings by our students. We found out that the online liking ratio strongly relates to the liking ratio by our students (R 2 =91.3%). Furthermore, we investigated students’ rating tendencies as function of their performance and gender. We found out that higher-performance students are more likely to like or dislike a video, whereas lower-performance students are less determined. The gender only affected the disliking tendency with female students making more use of the corresponding rate. The findings of the study can help students searching for educational videos as well as producers of such videos towards improved content quality and learning outcomes.
KW - Educational online videos
KW - Human-computer interface
KW - Multimedia/hypermedia systems
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85062234383&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.compedu.2019.02.008
DO - 10.1016/j.compedu.2019.02.008
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85062234383
SN - 0360-1315
VL - 134
SP - 132
EP - 144
JO - Computers and Education
JF - Computers and Education
ER -