Breadcrumbs

Research digest: This paper is about using video as a learning object rather than as decoration. The strongest use is when video slows down a hard-to-see phenomenon, supports replay, and gives students a shared piece of evidence for discussion.

Classroom use: Use short, purposeful clips before or after an inquiry activity. Pair each clip with a question that students answer using visible evidence from the video.

Paper: arXiv:1502.01090

Authors: Kah Hean Chua, Ming Yeo Oh, Loo Kang Wee, Ching Tan

Publication: MOE i in Practice Volume III

Theme: Using multimedia video to strengthen learning

Multimedia-Video for Learning
First page of the open-access paper, used as a direct visual cue for this research digest.

What teachers can take from this

This paper is about using video as a learning object rather than as decoration. The strongest use is when video slows down a hard-to-see phenomenon, supports replay, and gives students a shared piece of evidence for discussion.

Use it tomorrow

Use short, purposeful clips before or after an inquiry activity. Pair each clip with a question that students answer using visible evidence from the video.

Pedagogical move

Ask students to annotate, pause, or compare frames instead of passively watching.

Good discussion prompts

  • What evidence does the model, video, or activity make visible?
  • Which variable should students change first, and what should they keep constant?
  • What claim can students make from the evidence, and what limitation should they acknowledge?