YouTube Videos in the Virtual Flipped Classroom Model Using Brain Signals and Facial Expressions
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. The Flipped Classroom Model
- Teaches students to take responsibility for their learning.
- Allows a more personalized means of teaching.
- Allows direct teaching to be synchronous, making it possible to differentiate among the students.
- Makes learning the focus of the class.
- Provides students immediate feedback and reduces the teacher’s role.
- Provides leveling opportunities.
- Allows the assimilation of contents by different means.
- Provides multiple opportunities to check for understanding.
- Transforms the role of the teacher.
- Teaches students the value of learning, rather than just going to school to pass.
- Is easy to reproduce, adapt, and personalize.
- Increases personal interactions with the teacher.
- Ensures that all students become involved.
- Makes hands-on activities more enjoyable.
- Increases interest in teacher demonstrations.
- Makes it easier for teachers to help students.
- Plan the lesson: Determine the objective of the class, establish the contents, design the sequence (beginning, development, closure) and the learning activities that should be included, in addition to their evaluation. Gather the necessary components (sometimes it is necessary to investigate the subject to develop it, prepare tables, get images, etc.).
- Record the video: The video can be recorded by directly speaking to the camera in a digital presentation using voice or by designing the video using an available tool.
- Edit the video: To achieve higher quality and a more attractive product.
- Post the video: The method of distributing the videos to the students depends on the policies of the educational institutions. Some have private platforms for this and specific policies that prevent posting their teachers’ materials on public sites. If the institution allows it, the videos can be placed on various public platforms, including social networks such as YouTube, Instagram, and Facebook.
1.2. The Flipped Classroom Model in the Development of Grammatical Competency
1.3. The Advantages of Audiovisual Digitization of Learning Resources
- Favors the observation of reality: Allows accurate representation or recording of events.
- Facilitates understanding and analysis: Allows observation of reality and visualization of structures, processes, and relationships that can be simply and easily described and captured.
- Provides a motivating and attractive element for students: Its ease of understanding, realism, and impact (at times) attracts students.
- Introduces multiple languages and literacies into education: Helps complement the didactic value of oral and written languages.
- Improves the effectiveness of teaching activities: Improves student performance, making explanations easier by showing various processes.
- Facilitates the learning of audiovisual writing: Audiovisual language tools help young people adapt and integrate into the contemporary world and acquire skills to express themselves.
- Enhances media skills and creativity: Students learn technological production, acquire teamwork and problem-solving skills, and develop creativity.
- Stimulates the use and access to shared resource banks: The teacher is incentivized to use and share materials through various platforms.
- Promotes the consideration of audiovisual heritage: Students can acquire media skills, enrich their understanding of the environment, and appreciate their own and other people’s cultural values.
- Allows the introduction of aesthetic and creative evaluation criteria: These materials depict reality and allow artistic expression that develops aesthetic skills.
1.4. YouTube as an Educational Platform
2. Methodology
2.1. The Participating Population and the Procedure
- -
- Content: focused solely on the assigned topic, including some reinforcement of prior knowledge, if possible, and with short exercises to reinforce learning.
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- Duration: long enough to present the content in a concrete and precise way to adolescent students (between 5 and 10 min, approximately).
- -
- Image: high quality, attractive, and stimulating, adding various colors, illustrations, and visual effects.
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- Audio: explanatory; the teacher’s voice exposes the subject in a clear, entertaining, and simple way.
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- Text: presents the most important content to reinforce the teacher’s oral explanation.
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- Greeting: brief welcome to the video and overview of its content.
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- Opening: brief recovery of prior knowledge or basis for understanding the topic to be addressed.
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- Development: concrete and clear explanation of the topic to be addressed with specific examples; content summarized if necessary and organized logically.
- -
- Reinforcement: short exercises that allow consolidating the subject.
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- Closing: brief compilation of what was learned.
2.2. Data Collection
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- Standardized tests to measure grammar competency: Both tests were designed with 45 multiple-choice questions with four answer options. They were applied through Google Forms during 45 min synchronous sessions on the Zoom platform, one prior to starting the course (diagnostic) and another on the last day (final). The students responded on their mobile phones and, through their computer’s camera, the teacher monitored the application through the Zoom session. The contents that were evaluated are shown in Table 4.
- -
- Learning styles test: The test selected to measure learning styles was the ILS Index of Learning Style in Spanish, prepared by Barbara A. Soloman and Richard M. Felder [23] at North Carolina State University, United States. The test consists of 44 questions that assess the learning styles and classify them into four indicators: active/reflective, sensitive/intuitive, visual/verbal, and global/sequential. The students had five days to answer the test through its official page and report their specific results in a Google Form, where they also uploaded their PDF report sheet obtained from the test site as evidence. This process facilitated the classification of the learning style of each student (see Table 5).
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- Opinion survey for students: The survey was emailed to students via Google Forms, and students were given three days to complete it. The questions asked are shown in Table 6.
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- Opinion survey for teachers: The survey was emailed to the participating teachers through Google Forms. The questions asked are shown in Table 7.
3. Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
- Díaz, A. Acentuación, 2017. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bsU9LyZM8QI, accessed on 25 August 2021.
- Díaz, A. Puntuación, 2017. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I-5NQO8DyUw, accessed on 25 August 2021.
- Díaz, A. Sustantivos, 2017. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4agOqIbAYbA&t=84s, accessed on 25 August 2021.
- Sangerman, A. La oración simple: Sus components sintácticos, 2021.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tvABuss7RTM&t=254s, accessed on 25 August 2021.
- Sangerman, A. La oración simple: Sus tipos, 2020.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bzDFGEAw5w0, accessed on 25 August 2021.
- Sangerman, A. Oraciones compuestas: Yuxtapuestas, 2020.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=amjpjii0NHs&t=55s, accessed on 25 August 2021.
- Sangerman, A. Oraciones coordinadas: Sus tipos, 2020.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K0KTiMFY2Qs&t=30s, accessed on 25 August 2021.
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Flipped Classroom | Traditional Teaching | ||
---|---|---|---|
Advantage | Disadvantage | Advantage | Disadvantage |
Students arrive prepared for the session. | More time is required for students to prepare ahead of time. | Students are not required to invest additional time before class for their preparation. | Students do not know what they will learn. |
The student learns at his own pace because he can review the contents in the specifically designed materials multiple times. | The teacher spends time designing additional materials or searching for and becoming familiar with them. | No extra time is required for the teacher to design additional materials or search for and become familiar with them. He teaches the class with his knowledge. | The student must learn at the speed that the teacher teaches, relying only on the notes that they are able to take. |
The student has the opportunity to process the knowledge in advance for its application later in the session. | More time is required for students to review materials in advance. | Students are not required to invest additional time before class to do their work during class. They learn during class. | The student is forced to apply the knowledge immediately after the teacher’s presentation. |
The on-site teacher directly monitors the learning activities. | The class demands more attention and effort from the teacher. | The teacher spends less time monitoring activities. | Learning activities carried out outside of class are not directly monitored. |
Differentiated instruction is applied because the model requires monitoring of student performance in on-site activities. | The class demands more work for the teacher for individualized follow-up. | The class is primarily expository and does not demand as much individualized follow-up by the teacher. | It does not allow a personalized follow-up during the activities as they are mainly done outside of class. |
The teacher improvises little; the model forces planning. | The model demands more time from the teacher, at least in its implementation. | The model does not demand that the teacher spend too much time planning. | The teacher can improvise all the time by relying solely on the presentation. |
There is always time to consolidate learning because the contents are reviewed beforehand. | More time is required for students to review content in advance and free up time for consolidation. | Students are not required to invest additional time before class to review content. | The presentation of the contents in class and incorporating activities in the same session limit the time to consolidate. |
Contribution of the Studies Provided vs. Contribution of the Present Study | ||
---|---|---|
Region | Contribution | Present Study |
Ecuador | This study describes how the model can be implemented in a completely virtual format and reinforced that this model improves collaboration, meaningful learning, self-management, commitment, and motivation. | This study is notably related to the international studies’ contributions because it reinforces several of their findings. However, this study makes a very important contribution: it shows the methodology to follow sequentially to implement the model in a virtual format. This allows the model to be implemented in line with all of the recommendations presented here. |
Spain | This study reinforced that the model generates notable improvements in academic performance and makes students more independent. | |
Russia | This study reinforced that the model allows a more personalized mentoring and an environment that helps teachers to be closer to the students. It found that the model develops the teacher’s ability to synthesize their lessons. | |
Latin America | This study reinforced that the model is well received by students, and also makes them more independent and better managers of their own learning. | |
Colombia | This study found that the model helps to better manage the time of foreign language classes to favor the interaction of students and thus enable practice of their communication skills. |
Activity | Description | Time |
---|---|---|
Opening | Small warm-up activity that integrates previous knowledge without yet addressing the prior topic. | 5 min. |
Q&A | Space for student questions on the subject and questions from the teacher to validate learning of the subject seen in the video. | 5 min. |
Consolidation, Production | Activity where students demonstrate their mastery of the subject; elaboration of products or execution of diverse activities assigned according to each student’s learning style. | 30 min. |
Closing | Clarification of final questions, a quick summary of what was learned about the topic, and instructions for the next video (what should be focused on, how the new topic should be approached, how to perform the exercise if there is one, etc.). | 10 min. |
Topics | Number of Questions |
---|---|
Variable grammatical categories: nouns, articles, pronouns, adjectives, and verbs | 4 |
Invariable grammatical categories: conjunctions, prepositions, adverbs, and interjections | 4 |
Prefixes, lexemes, suffixes, and grammemes | 3 |
Accentuation | 4 |
Orthography | 4 |
Homographs, homophones, paronyms, synonyms, and antonyms | 3 |
The simple sentence and its types: enunciative, interrogative, exclamatory, optional, imperative, exhortative, doubtful, and possibility/probability | 4 |
Syntactic components of the simple sentence: subject (nucleus and modifiers), predicate (nucleus, direct object, indirect and circumstantial complements) | 4 |
Compound sentences: coordinated (copulative, distributive, disjunctive, and adversative) and juxtaposed | 6 |
Subordinate clauses: nouns, adjectives, and adverbials (mode, time, place, condition, consequence, endings, comparison, and concession) | 9 |
Questions | Answer Choices |
---|---|
I understand something better after… |
|
When I think about what I did yesterday, ____ are more likely to come to mind. |
|
In a study group working on a difficult topic, I am more likely to… |
|
I find it easier… |
|
I remember better… |
|
I would rather study… |
|
I am more likely to be considered a(n) ____ person. |
|
Questions | Answer Choices |
---|---|
The percentage of the course videos I watched was roughly |
|
The videos allowed me to understand the course topics. |
|
The course activities allowed me to consolidate learning. |
|
The learning activities aligned with my learning style. |
|
The methodology used in this course was beneficial in improving my grammar competency in Spanish. |
|
Questions | Answer Choices |
---|---|
The percentage of the departmental videos that I used in the course was |
|
My opinion about the videos of this course as the primary didactic materials of the implemented model is that they were |
|
How often did it take ADDITIONAL time to familiarize myself with the videos? |
|
How much ADDITIONAL time to the length of the video did I have to step in on average to get familiar with it? |
|
The level of participation of my students in preparing with the videos before the sessions was |
|
For the design of the activities, I considered the predominant learning style of my students. |
|
I feel like I successfully trained my students to learn under the Flipped Classroom model. |
|
From my perspective, the Flipped Classroom model can be more beneficial than the traditional model for the development of grammatical competency. |
|
What would I modify the Flipped Classroom model implemented in the 2020 Summer Course? |
|
EGG Time 0–3:00 Min | EGG Time 3:01–5:49 Min | Emocard Time 0–3:00 Min | Emocard Time 3:01–5:49 Min |
---|---|---|---|
8 students maintain concentration | 3 students maintain concentration | 8 students were pleasantly excited 1 student had average pleasure | 2 students were pleasantly excited 1 student had average pleasure |
2 students could not maintain concentration | 7 students could not maintain concentration | 1 student was calmly pleasant | 7 students were calmly pleasant |
Questions | Teachers’ Responses |
---|---|
The percentage of the departmental videos that I used in the course was |
|
My opinion about the videos of this course as the primary didactic materials of the implemented model is that they were |
|
Did it take ADDITIONAL time to become familiar with the videos? |
|
How much ADDITIONAL time to the length of the video did I have on average to get familiar with it? |
|
The level of participation of my students in preparing with the videos before the sessions was |
|
For the design of the activities, I considered the predominant learning style of my students. |
|
I feel like I successfully trained my students to learn under the Flipped Classroom model. |
|
From my perspective, the Flipped Classroom model can be more beneficial than the traditional model for the development of grammatical competency. |
|
What would I modify from the Flipped Classroom model implemented in the 2020 Summer Course? |
|
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Sangermán Jiménez, M.A.; Ponce, P.; Vázquez-Cano, E. YouTube Videos in the Virtual Flipped Classroom Model Using Brain Signals and Facial Expressions. Future Internet 2021, 13, 224. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi13090224
Sangermán Jiménez MA, Ponce P, Vázquez-Cano E. YouTube Videos in the Virtual Flipped Classroom Model Using Brain Signals and Facial Expressions. Future Internet. 2021; 13(9):224. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi13090224
Chicago/Turabian StyleSangermán Jiménez, María Artemisa, Pedro Ponce, and Esteban Vázquez-Cano. 2021. "YouTube Videos in the Virtual Flipped Classroom Model Using Brain Signals and Facial Expressions" Future Internet 13, no. 9: 224. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi13090224
APA StyleSangermán Jiménez, M. A., Ponce, P., & Vázquez-Cano, E. (2021). YouTube Videos in the Virtual Flipped Classroom Model Using Brain Signals and Facial Expressions. Future Internet, 13(9), 224. https://doi.org/10.3390/fi13090224