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[Educational Journals - Social Sciences & Sex Education]


Gender, Computer-Assisted Learning, and Anxiety: With A Little Help From A Friend


Joel Cooper and Jeff Stone
Journal of Educational Computing Research, Vol. 15 No 1, 1997, p. 67-91

This study examined the effects of learning group gender composition and the use of nonverbal communkcation by a computer on performance and motivation following a computer-assisted biology lesson. The results showed that before the lesson began, group gender composition influenced self-reports of experience and knowledge about computers and also how subjects arranged their computer desktop. During the lesson, when a computer image of a human face was present on the screen, girls who reported low anxiety performed better and were more motivated to use the program relative to girls who reqported high anxiety. In contrast, boys who reported high anxiety performed better and were more motivated to use the program when the tutor was present on the screen relative to boys who reported low anxiety. The implications of these findings for classroom gender organization and for using gender-appropriate educational software are discussed.

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