Abstract
In a controlled experiment, students in two sections of introductory sociology were exposed either to conventional classroom lectures or to the same lectures broadcast live in an adjacent room on a television monitor. Except for the first round of six lectures, when technical problems appeared to have lowered test performance by the experimental groups, learning under the two lecturing modes was statistically equivalent. Self-reported class attendance, also, seemed to have been unaffected by lecturing modes. This study confirms the general pattern of results from a number of prior, albeit less rigorously designed, studies of live vs. televised lecture courses.
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Ellis, L., Mathis, D. College student learning from televised versus conventional classroom lectures: A controlled experiment. High Educ 14, 165–173 (1985). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00137482
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00137482