Abstract

What is the role of verbal guidance in promoting mathematics learning from a discovery-based multimedia game? Are there important individual differences for which a multimedia game helps some kinds of learners more than others? These are important questions both for research and for the application of research, to improve instruction and learning outcomes in learning mathematics with multimedia programs. Our first question is concerned with the issue of how one should design multimedia games to enhance student learning and focuses on the role of verbal guidance as an aid to meaning making. To answer this question, we examined the cognitive consequences of learning how to add and subtract positive and negative numbers within a discovery-based multimedia game either with or without verbal guidance. Our second question is concerned with the issue of how individual differences influence learning from interactive multimedia games. More specifically, we were interested in examining the role that students’ computer experience and latency to solve problems had when students were asked to learn from a discovery-based computer game that presented multiple representations (symbolic and visual) of the arithmetic procedure. The main goal of this study was to investigate if the benefits of guidance that had been documented in past research on discoverybased strategies in the classroom extended into the realm of multimedia learning. In our study, elementary students studied 16 addition and subtraction problems involving positive and negative numbers in each of four training sessions with two representations of the arithmetic procedure: a symbolic representation consisting

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