TY - JOUR
T1 - Learning About Lunar Phases
T2 - Exploring Taiwanese University Students’ Conceptions of and Approaches to Learning by Holographic Projection
AU - Fan, Yang Hsin
AU - Lin, Tzung Jin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2025/1
Y1 - 2025/1
N2 - Extant literature has preliminarily confirmed the potential benefits of holographic projections for educational purposes. Yet, students’ experiences of learning by holographic projection have rarely been addressed. The main purpose of this study was therefore to explore students’ conceptions of and approaches to learning by holographic projection. A holographic projection system was devised to assist students in learning the concept of lunar phases. This study also investigated the relationships between students’ conceptions and approaches, and determined if there were any variations based on students’ learning gains. Phenomenographic analysis was adopted to analyze 30 university students from Taiwan, and a multiple-choice conceptual test was conducted to assess their learning achievements. The main findings indicated that students with conceptions of learning by holographic projection as increasing the presence of a scene or mapping 2D images to 3D structures tended to adopt surface approaches, such as only observing the changes presented in the holographic projection, repetitively operating the system functions without intended purposes, or simply following the instruction guidelines to meet the minimal requirements. However, this study unexpectedly found that students who utilized surface approaches had significantly higher learning gains on the conceptual test than their counterparts did.
AB - Extant literature has preliminarily confirmed the potential benefits of holographic projections for educational purposes. Yet, students’ experiences of learning by holographic projection have rarely been addressed. The main purpose of this study was therefore to explore students’ conceptions of and approaches to learning by holographic projection. A holographic projection system was devised to assist students in learning the concept of lunar phases. This study also investigated the relationships between students’ conceptions and approaches, and determined if there were any variations based on students’ learning gains. Phenomenographic analysis was adopted to analyze 30 university students from Taiwan, and a multiple-choice conceptual test was conducted to assess their learning achievements. The main findings indicated that students with conceptions of learning by holographic projection as increasing the presence of a scene or mapping 2D images to 3D structures tended to adopt surface approaches, such as only observing the changes presented in the holographic projection, repetitively operating the system functions without intended purposes, or simply following the instruction guidelines to meet the minimal requirements. However, this study unexpectedly found that students who utilized surface approaches had significantly higher learning gains on the conceptual test than their counterparts did.
KW - educational technology
KW - holographic projection technology
KW - learning outcomes
KW - lunar phases education
KW - mixed reality in education
KW - phenomenographic analysis
KW - spatial learning
KW - university student learning
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U2 - 10.1177/07356331241282897
DO - 10.1177/07356331241282897
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85203307965
SN - 0735-6331
VL - 62
SP - 2076
EP - 2103
JO - Journal of Educational Computing Research
JF - Journal of Educational Computing Research
IS - 8
ER -