The introduction of lecture capture has proved, like most technological innovations in higher education, controversial.
Debates over the merits of recording lectures and making them available online for students have ranged from the issue of who retains copyright of the content to the divisive聽use of pre-recorded lectures to provide 鈥渢uition鈥 during strikes by academics.
Online recordings can allow students to watch missed lectures 鈥 invaluable for those聽absent because of ill health or those who have disabilities that make attendance on campus聽difficult 鈥 and to use them for revision, which is particularly聽beneficial for students who have learning issues or struggle with the language. The footage can also聽serve as a study aid in a flipped classroom set-up.
But critics say that the recordings encourage students to聽skip lectures and damage the overall attainment of those who rely on them聽because聽recordings聽can lack the personal engagement that frequently drives learning.
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Anecdotally, some academics have reported that introducing lecture capture has caused attendance rates to drop. Melanie O鈥橞rien, a senior lecturer in international law at the University of Western Australia, told 探花视频 that since lecture capture was made compulsory at her institution, attendance to lectures in her department has plummeted. 鈥淥ne colleague with 150 students enrolled has lectured to 15 students. Three of us have lectured to empty rooms,鈥 she said.
Social media has been awash with posts from academics sharing similar negative experiences, but contrasting views have been equally well represented. The academic literature on the subject is much the same: a number of studies report that the introduction of lecture capture has had a negative effect on attendance, while others reveal no correlation.
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In a paper published earlier this year, researchers at King鈥檚 College London found that the introduction of lecture capture on one course was followed by a doubling of the number of undergraduates who did not attend any lectures 鈥 and also a doubling of the proportion of students who skipped all classes, to 40聽per cent. A 2009 study in Canada of nearly 900 students found that 37聽per cent of聽them said that their attendance was affected by lecture-capture availability, and a University of Birmingham study reported a decline in attendance at lectures from 84聽per cent to 71聽per cent after lecture capture was introduced.
In contrast, a new study led by Emily Nordmann, a psychologist who has recently moved from the University of Aberdeen to the University of Glasgow, found 鈥渘o compelling evidence鈥 of a relationship between attendance and recording. The study, accepted for publication in the journal Higher Education, says that it was the first to look across four years of an undergraduate programme and that it found 鈥渘o negative effect of recording use鈥.
Other studies have reached similar conclusions. Computer scientists at Queen鈥檚 University Belfast who monitored the introduction of lecture capture on their courses聽judged that it had not harmed attendance and reported that students had used the footage to aid their learning, according to a 2015 paper. Meanwhile, a Solent University study released the same year said that lecture capture would not encourage them to skip lectures.
One big problem is that the majority of research into lecture capture relies on self-reported data, indicating students鈥 intent to not miss lectures, rather than聽information about聽actual student behaviour. Some recent studies, such as the ones undertaken at King鈥檚 and Aberdeen, have tried to overcome this by comparing attendance and attainment before and after the introduction of lecture recordings.
Other research efforts have focused on the relationship between how students use lecture capture and the grades that they achieve. A 2015 lecture capture , by Gabi Witthaus and Carol Robinson for Loughborough University, identified a 2012 Australian study that showed that students who substituted viewings of recorded lectures for physically attending were found to be at a severe disadvantage in terms of their final marks; 鈥渕oreover, those students who attended very few live lectures did not close the gap by watching more online鈥, it said.
Although聽several studies have found no negative correlation between use of lecture capture and attainment, these have sometimes focused on cases in which students have used the footage聽to supplement their existing learning activities.
鈥淪imply logging on to a recording does not equate with engagement with material,鈥 said Michael Draper, an associate professor of legal studies at Swansea University, who conducted a study that found that lecture capture did not harm attendance.
The 2013 Birmingham study, which聽reported that even high usage of lecture recordings did not have a significant impact on academic performance, took a balanced view. 鈥淥verall, this approach appears to be beneficial, but may reduce lecture attendance and encourage surface learning approaches in a minority of students,鈥 the researchers said.
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Martin Edwards, who led the King鈥檚 research, said that even if a minority of students say that they聽will not attend lectures because recordings are available, that can still translate to a sizeable portion of the cohort suddenly going absent. Dr聽Edwards pointed out that even Dr聽Nordmann鈥檚 study found that the one course that did not have lecture recordings had significantly higher attendance than those that did have recordings.
He added that when talking about whether lecture capture had a positive influence on students, it was important to note that there was a difference between the introduction of lecture capture and its effect on attendance, and lecture-capture viewing and its effect on attainment.
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鈥淭he people who are so-called deep learners will attend lectures and use lecture capture to boost their study, so it won鈥檛 have a negative effect on their attainment. The problem lies with the introduction of lecture capture, which the overall evidence shows does translate to a drop in attendance, and those 鈥榮urface learners鈥 who watch lectures online instead of attending,鈥 he said.
The literature review also highlighted a that showed that students who were identified as surface learners tended to report missing more lectures and using recordings as a replacement for lectures, whereas deep learners tended to use the recordings as an extra resource, to help with revision, for example.
鈥淭he evidence shows that students who choose not to go because they rely on lecture capture will struggle to keep up, and that鈥檚 a real problem; it can potentially disadvantage certain types of learning styles,鈥 Dr Edwards said.
Dr Nordmann said that she believed the key takeaway from her study to be not the lack of a relationship between lecture capture and attendance or attainment, but rather the revelation聽of just how many different things impact attendance. 鈥淚t鈥檚 actually really difficult to draw these big conclusions about the effect of lecture capture based on individual studies. You have to look at the literature,鈥 she said.
Most studies are a snapshot of one course at one level of study, Dr Nordmann continued. 鈥淓ven in our study that looked at four years, we found that there was a difference in attendance between two recorded courses in the second year, and I聽think the reason for it was that one of the topics was more popular,鈥 she explained.
鈥淐urrently, studies are only ever comparing a recorded course and a non-recorded course in one discipline. But if you compare your recorded courses, you will find a difference in attendance; that鈥檚 a really strong signal that it鈥檚 not just about the recordings,鈥 she said. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 say lecture capture is good or bad, it鈥檚 how it is being used and who it is being used聽by.鈥
Lecture capture聽is already聽a fixture聽in higher education around the globe. Its use is widespread, and many institutions are joining Western Australia聽in making it compulsory,聽including De Montfort University and the University of Huddersfield in the UK.
鈥淟ecture capture is here to stay,鈥 said Swansea鈥檚 Mr聽Draper. 鈥淚n a short space of time, students are so used to the system that they are likely to complain if it is not available.鈥
However, he cautioned that it must be integrated as part of a strategy 鈥渢hat seeks to support students in their studies or as part of a blended learning programme, rather than an immediate substitute for traditional learning though face-to-face contact鈥. At Swansea, for example, the policy is to 鈥渨ipe鈥 the lectures at the end of the year and to give lecturers the聽choice to opt out, he added.
For Dr Nordmann, the most important thing is to start providing guidance for students. 鈥淲e give them this technology but don鈥檛 tell them how best to use it,鈥 she said. They need to know that supplementary use is best and not to use it as a substitute for in-person lectures, she added.
Most universities offer online courses, so it鈥檚 not illogical for students to聽believe that that is聽how you can use recordings, Dr聽Nordmann continued. 鈥淲e need to be making the case for attendance and lecture capture as a supplemental technology in a way that we aren鈥檛 now; we鈥檙e complaining about attendance but not doing anything to guide the students.鈥
Dr Edwards added that one of the ways to counteract the drop in attendance was to ensure that lectures provide something special that cannot be replicated in a recording. If lectures are interactive 鈥撀爀mploying聽in-class polls, for example 鈥 students get something more from being present in the room, he said.
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There are good arguments for why all lectures should be recorded, particularly for students with special educational needs who聽require some extra help, he said. 鈥淭he problem is, there will be a proportion of the cohort that will not go because there is a recording of it.鈥
POSTSCRIPT:
Print headline:聽Watch and learn? Lecture capture gets mixed reviews
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