Using Eye-Trackers to Study Student Attention in Physical Science Classes.

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Physics education researchers have had a strong impact on how professors teach physics and physical science courses. Faculty can find an instructional strategy to match their personal philosophies, yet how do students pay attention in those classes? There is the old belief that you have your students’ attention for the first 15 minutes of class but after that their attention declines. Researchers have studied student attention in the past but have not used an eye-tracker to truly capture what students look at during class. This study is the first to introduce eye-trackers to investigate student attention in a lecture or more accurately a large group instruction environment. I conducted this study in the fall and the spring semester of a physical science course. One student in each class wore an eye-tracker. I found that the first 15 minute adage is not necessarily true. Over the course of an entire class students have the ability to stay on-task fairly consistently.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalDefault journal
StatePublished - Jan 1 2013

Keywords

  • Eye-tracking, Lecture, Undergraduate, Physical science, Gaze fixations differences

Disciplines

  • Education
  • Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
  • Science and Mathematics Education

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