Does where you start matter? The interaction between prior knowledge and effectiveness of game-based interventions

Allison LIU, Yun-Chen CHAN, Ji-Eun LEE, Lauren E. DECKER-WOODROW, Shihfen TU, Adam SALES, Craig A. MASON

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapters

Abstract

The current study investigated how prior knowledge moderated the effects of three educational technologies (From Here to There, DragonBox 12+, and problem sets in ASSISTments) on seventh-grade students' later algebraic knowledge. Pretest scores only moderated effects of From Here to There, with larger effects among students with higher pretest performance. Our findings have implications for understanding how prior knowledge interacts with design features within game-based applications to impact algebraic understanding. Copyright © 2022 ISLS.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationDoes where you start matter? The interaction between prior knowledge and effectiveness of game-based interventions
Place of PublicationHiroshima, Japan
PublisherInternational Society of the Learning Sciences
Pages2182-2183
ISBN (Electronic)9781737330653
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Citation

Liu, A., Chan, J. Y.-C., Lee, J.-E., Decker-Woodrow, L. E., Tu, S., Sales, A., & Mason, C. A. (2022). Does where you start matter? The interaction between prior knowledge and effectiveness of game-based interventions. In Does where you start matter? The interaction between prior knowledge and effectiveness of game-based interventions (pp. 2182-2183). International Society of the Learning Sciences.

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