Innovative Teacher Education with the Augmented Reality Device Microsoft HoloLens—Results of an Exploratory Study and Pedagogical Considerations
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What impact does the use of HoloLens have on interest and motivation from the learners’ point of view?
- To what extent is the learning process supported by working with HoloLens from the learners’ point of view?
- What should be considered when working with HoloLens in terms of the didactic setting?
- What are the possibilities and pedagogical approaches offered by working with HoloLens?
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Research Design
2.3. Contents and Structure of the Teaching Unit
- (a)
- Visually identify at least one alpha-helix and one beta-sheet structure in the given protein.
- (b)
- Visually identify at least two amino acids of the primary structure in the stick and ball representation of the molecule.
- (c)
- Display and find the ligand (the structural part of a drug molecule) of the protein and identify the spatial structure where the ligand fits in. Students should answer the following question: Why could the ligand be a suitable drug?
2.4. Data Collection
2.5. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Selected Results of the Paper-Based Survey: Previous Experience and Attitude of the Participants
3.2. Selected Results of the Interviews
3.2.1. Usability and Technical Problems
S: I sometimes had some problems, for example (-) that the menu (-) just opened (-). For example, when I fidgeted around. (Laughter) And then I did not know how to close it. And then I was a bit overwhelmed (laughter).(Interview 10C, position 181–185)
S: Uh, pff, uh. That is a simple matter of five minutes or so, that is, uh, (-) sufficient for students like us at the university, uh at the university of teacher education.(Interview 09B, position 58)
3.2.2. Research Question 1: What Impact Does the Use of HoloLens Have on Interest and Motivation from the Learners’ Point of View?
S: I see a lot of possibilities, a lot of potential in it. What you (-) you could do with it! Especially in chemistry, I think it offers the opportunity to visualize things that would otherwise not be possible.
And, also for other subjects I think, (-) plus (-) um, of course it is also an own, um, motivator (-) so it motivates, it would motivate me myself. And, also the pupils, I think.(Interview 10A, position 28–32)
S: So, I was quite positively surprised because (-) I am rather convinced that it is, (-) so my previous opinion was that it is probably not very suitable for teaching, and this opinion has changed now.
I: Mhmmm, why?
S: Er (- -) for the reason that (-) it is actually quite easy to use, which I did not expect, and that you (-) actually can have a lot of fun with it.(Interview 10D, position 10–12)
S: Mhm, my motivation (-) yes, because it suddenly seems more real. Before, or when you have to identify molecules on a piece of paper, it is a bit, uh, I do not know, a bit boring. But when you see it in front of you, and you can change the layers, then my imagination increases, and with the imagination also the interest increases.(Interview 08C, position 40)
3.2.3. Research Question 2: To What Extent Is the Learning Process Supported by Working with HoloLens from the Learners’ Point of View?
S: I think, because (-) if you only have the 2D image, (-) then you have somewhat of a picture, but you cannot quite imagine it (-) in three dimensions. And when you really see it in front of you and you can experiment with it yourself, (-) then you learn (-) learn it (-) in yet another way. Or (-) experience it in a different way.(Interview 10C, position 57–61)
S: … and you can refer to 3D models and if you can do that, it is very supportive also for the (-) logic and for the whole comprehension.(Interview 10B, position 33)
S: Yes. (- -) Yes, that when I was interested in something, I could (-) just do something. So that I could zoom in or click on it and get information, like now (- -) um (-) yes, I could, discover (-) inquire and explore (laugh) whatever interested me.(Interview 08B, position 101-103)
S: I found the (-) the view with the, um (-) alpha-helix and the beta-sheet, I found that really helpful, that we can see it like this (-) that you can superimpose it and see it like this again… I found that really helpful.(Interview 08D, position 52–54)
S: Well, the learning app has really given many (-) tools, (-) what you can do. I mean this possibility to examine it in 3D in general, to enlarge it, to resize it, different ways of displaying it. Uh, it simply gives you additional possibilities and tools, I would say. So, it reinforces it [the learning process].(Interview 12A, position 41)
S: Because it is something special. Mhhh, uh, I still remember it weeks later, right.(Interview 03B, position 113)
3.2.4. Research Question 3: What Should Be Considered When Working with HoloLens in Terms of the Didactic Setting?
S: Um (-) another disadvantage is that you somehow have to have a technophile (- -) expert, maybe not quite, but just someone who can install the whole thing somehow and synchronize it and is available if something does not work.(Interview 10A, position 130)
S: Personally, I am a person who learns a lot when I have to write something down. But I also grew up writing everything by hand. And if I have to write it down, like for myself, a formula, COOH or something, I then can (-) like (-) remember better and I do not know how you could incorporate that with HoloLens. In the end, you still have to learn which molecule is structured in what way, for example. And that could be lost a little bit, I think.(Interview 08C, position 82)
S: Um (- -) yes, you can (-) you have seen the (-) but I do not have it like somehow (-) in contrast to a paper form, I have the molecules underlined afterwards and I can look at it again later and I know what I did there, and, and (-) here it is really just memory and what I have actually done now. It supports, but you do not have anything fixed afterwards… so it is in your hands again if you want to look at it again or something. So, if you only work with this, you still have to find some way to store it or something.(Interview 08D, position 74–76)
S: I think it is simply limited in (-) the (-) choice of topics, so how (-) the possibilities, what is there. There are (-) there (-) and it will probably also (-) be presented in the form in which the program is designed (-) and maybe that corresponds to you as a teacher or maybe to you as a student (-) or that does not quite correspond (-) the way you can learn it, but also (-) with today’s teaching materials (-) some learn better that way, others that way (-) from that point of view (-) yes.(Interview 09C, position 67)
S: Hm. Yes, as a complementary tool I think it is certainly really great. You cannot work with the HoloLens only. You almost cannot (-). But it, uh, supports the traditional ways of how you learn. For sure. (-) Who knows, maybe, uh, the HoloLens will become a traditional, traditional (-) uh learning opportunity. So, I do not know. Exciting. (-) It is exciting!(Interview 09B, position 46)
S: Well, I think with regard to the subject content, what we have already said with the (-) 3D and just that you can illustrate something. Regarding the method, it is simply a… a way of creating something new in class, it gets away from endless sheets of paper and books (-), it can also be a very big (-) source of motivation for the students, maybe also to get them excited about technology, which, after all, is not the stupidest idea in the subject of science and technology. And um (-) yes, I think it is simply (-) a, a method of working (-) together on something that you have never done before, which is then also (-) another (-) there, it also needs a lot of cooperation and (-) that is never wrong.(Interview 10B, position 82)
S: But also in the fact that you (-), that you can interact with each other, so you can stand around the molecule in twos, threes, you can discuss with each other, you can um (-) I can… for example, rotate the protein while my partner could also see it the same way. But at the same time, he saw it from a different perspective, so you can also come to an added value with (-) so (- -) on the social level.(Interview 10A, position 97)
S: You can actually give open assignments, but if I have understood correctly, Mr. Beck [the lecturer] was always able to look into our work. You do have this control by being able to get involved.(Interview 08A, position 41)
S: That (-) depends on how concentrated you work. I think there are both, if you are really interested in the subject content and want to study and learn, it can be extremely supportive, when you just want to (-) try it out, yes, then (-) it is like a laptop or a mobile phone or something, I mean, I can do both on the laptop. Either I am really concentrated and I am writing my texts and I am studying or whatever, or I am watching Netflix (laughing). And I think it is similar here, so you have a lot of possibilities to just turn and zoom the molecule, so (-) if you do not want to learn, then (-) it does not necessarily support you.(Interview 08D, position 64–68)
S: If you want to take the effort and introduce them to it (-), which is something I can very well imagine, perhaps once in a school project week, when you have more time to do this, you can use it in many projects, and I think the pupils also like that very much.(Interview 10B, position 96)
S: Um, actually yes, but um, it is perhaps a bit (-) more difficult. That, on the one hand, that it is handled carefully (-) ahm (-), that it does not just create a huge chaos. (laughter) (-) Because (-) um, because then the HoloLens really, um, because the focus is then simply on the device and not on the things that you actually want to look at.(Interview 11B, position 69)
S: Possibly. Carefully, yes, ahm. As I said, I am not a big fan of technology. I do not think you have to bring electronics into everything. Because they already have a lot of it in their leisure time or because it is already a huge topic anyway. I would rather give a balance to it. Somehow show that it can also be interesting without it. And there are so many possibilities, I think. And from that point of view, I would never rule it out, I think, but yes, I am perhaps more the traditional type.(Interview 08A, position 59)
4. Discussion
4.1. Impact on Learning with the Use of HoloLens
4.2. Considerations on the Didactic Setting When Working with HoloLens
4.3. Reflections on the Possibilities and Pedagogical Approaches Offered When Working with HoloLens
4.4. Considerations for Future Research
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Wyss, C.; Bührer, W.; Furrer, F.; Degonda, A.; Hiss, J.A. Innovative Teacher Education with the Augmented Reality Device Microsoft HoloLens—Results of an Exploratory Study and Pedagogical Considerations. Multimodal Technol. Interact. 2021, 5, 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti5080045
Wyss C, Bührer W, Furrer F, Degonda A, Hiss JA. Innovative Teacher Education with the Augmented Reality Device Microsoft HoloLens—Results of an Exploratory Study and Pedagogical Considerations. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction. 2021; 5(8):45. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti5080045
Chicago/Turabian StyleWyss, Corinne, Wolfgang Bührer, Florian Furrer, Adrian Degonda, and Jan A. Hiss. 2021. "Innovative Teacher Education with the Augmented Reality Device Microsoft HoloLens—Results of an Exploratory Study and Pedagogical Considerations" Multimodal Technologies and Interaction 5, no. 8: 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti5080045
APA StyleWyss, C., Bührer, W., Furrer, F., Degonda, A., & Hiss, J. A. (2021). Innovative Teacher Education with the Augmented Reality Device Microsoft HoloLens—Results of an Exploratory Study and Pedagogical Considerations. Multimodal Technologies and Interaction, 5(8), 45. https://doi.org/10.3390/mti5080045