Abstract
With the increasing use of digital learning materials in higher education, the accumulated operational log data provide a unique opportunity to analyzing student learning behaviors and their effects on student learning performance to understand how students learn with e-books. Among the students’ reading behaviors interacting with e-book systems, we find that jump-back is a frequent and informative behavior type. In this paper, we aim to understand the student’s intention for a jump-back using user learning log data on the e-book materials of a course in our university. We at first formally define the “jump-back” behaviors that can be detected from the click event stream of slide reading and then systematically study the behaviors from different perspectives on the e-book event stream data. Finally, by sampling 22 learning materials, we identify six reading activity patterns that can explain jump backs. Our analysis provides an approach to enriching the understanding of e-book learning behaviors and informs design implications for e-book systems.
Highlights
Learning Management Systems (LMSs) and e-book systems are increasingly used together for supporting daily classroom teaching
Causes for jump-back behaviors: Why jump back behaviors occur? Can we identify the reasons that can lead to a jump back?
Students of Type 3 seem to have no obvious preference during the class and the preparation. The frequency of their jump backs becomes obviously higher in the review time, and the jump spans become longer compared with the preparation and in-class (RQ2)
Summary
Learning Management Systems (LMSs) and e-book systems are increasingly used together for supporting daily classroom teaching. Many countries plan to use e-books in schools, and many traditional textbooks have been replaced by e-books in many schools (Rainie et al, 2012). By using e-books, a significant amount of logged educational data can be created. These log data are a recording of learning practices (Mostow, 2004) and represent one of the most valuable sources of information for analyzing the activities of students.
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