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Educational Psychology
An International Journal of Experimental Educational Psychology
Volume 36, 2016 - Issue 9
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Articles

Which features make illustrations in multimedia learning interesting?

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Pages 1596-1613 | Received 03 Jul 2013, Accepted 04 Jun 2014, Published online: 02 Jul 2014
 

Abstract

How can illustrations motivate learners in multimedia learning? Which features make illustrations interesting? Beside the theoretical relevance of addressing these questions, these issues are practically relevant when instructional designers are to decide which features of illustrations can trigger situational interest irrespective of individual differences. We analysed ratings of illustrations with respect to four potentially interest-triggering features (concreteness, personal relevance, ease of comprehension and unexpected information) and to situational interest. A methodological contribution was to show how multilevel modelling can be applied to take individual differences into account in several respects. Situational interest was predicted by 957 ratings of the four features on an intra-individual level (level 1). Inter-individual differences were controlled by modelling individuals on level 2 (N = 82 high-school students). Concreteness, personal relevance and ease of comprehension of illustrations are what mainly triggered situational interest. Nearly, 55% of the situational interest variance was explained by inter-individual preferences, thus, highlighting the usefulness of multilevel modelling to control for individual differences.

Notes

1. For two reasons, we assessed the four features with only one item: First, we wanted to reduce the burden of repeated queries for students (see also Birnbaum, Reis, Mikulincer, Gillath, & Orpaz, Citation2006; Tsai et al., Citation2008). Second, we were interested in assessing the student’s perception of illustrations as a situation-specific reaction (triggering situation interest; intra-individual level), as opposed to assessing reliable inter-individual differences.

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