USF St. Petersburg campus Faculty Publications
Following Student Gaze Patterns in Physical Science Lectures.
Document Type
Conference Proceeding
Publication Date
2011
ISSN
1551-7616
Abstract
This study investigates the gaze patterns of undergraduate college students attending a lecture-based physical science class to better understand the relationships between gaze and focus patterns and student attention during class. The investigators used a new eye-tracking product; Tobii Glasses. The glasses eliminate the need for subjects to focus on a computer screen or carry around a backpack-sized recording device, thus giving an investigator the ability to study a broader range of research questions. This investigation includes what students focus on in the classroom (i.e. demonstrations, instructor, notes, board work, and presentations) during a normal lecture, what diverts attention away from being on task as well as what keeps a subject on task. We report on the findings from 8 subjects during physical science lectures designed for future elementary school teachers. We found that students tended not to focus on the instructor for most parts of the lecture but rather the information, particularly new information presented on PowerPoint slides. Finally, we found that location in the classroom also impacted students’ attention spans due to more distractors.
Language
en_US
Publisher
Physics Education Research Conference
Recommended Citation
Rosengrant, D., Hearrington, D., Alvarado, K., & Keeble D. (2011, August). Following Student Gaze Patterns in Physical Science Lectures. 2011 Physics Education Research Conference Proceedings.
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 4.0 License.
Comments
This article resulted in over 400 stories online both nationally and internationally in places such as Reuters, USNews, and the Chronicle.