Effectiveness of real-time classroom interactive competition on academic performance: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Jurado Castro, José Manuel; Vargas Molina, Salvador; Gómez Urquiza, Jose Luis; Benítez Porres, JavierEditorial
PeerJ team
Materia
Mobile learning Gamification Kahoot Smartphone Students Classroom
Fecha
2023-04-12Referencia bibliográfica
Jurado-Castro JM, Vargas-Molina S, Gómez-Urquiza JL, Benítez-Porres J. 2023. Effectiveness of real-time classroom interactive competition on academic performance: a systematic review and meta-analysis. PeerJ Computer Science 9:e1310 [https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj-cs.1310]
Patrocinador
Universidad de Málaga (PIE19-083)Resumen
In recent years, different tools have been introduced into the educational landscape to
promote active participation and interaction between students and teachers through
personal response systems. The evolution of this methodology has allowed students
to participate in real-time by answering questions posed. Previous reviews on the
effectiveness of real-time classroom interactive competition (RCIC) on academic
performance have been performed; however, this research was based only on Kahoot,
without considering other RCIC tools or programs. In addition, the RCIC effectiveness
at different educational levels and its effect according to the duration of the intervention
has not been meta-analytically analyzed until to date. The aim of this meta-analysis was
to analyze the RCIC effectiveness in improving academic performance. A search focused
on studies from the educational field published from 2010 until September 2022 was
performed. Experimental studies with objective and valid data (scores based on tests
or exams) were included. From a total of 397 studies considered potentially eligible,
23 studies met the inclusion criteria. The sample was nD1,877 for the experimental
group and nD1,765 for the control group with an academic improvement in favor to
experimental group (MD 7.34; CI [5.31 9.43]; p<0:001). There was also significant
improvement in academic performance when analyzing different educational levels
and different tools. In addition, both short-term interventions (two weeks or less in
duration) and long-term (from two weeks to one year in duration) were effective.
Therefore, RCIC interventions seem to be an effective strategy to improve academic
performance.