Saturday 6 December 2014

Educational Animation

Can Animation Have an Effect on Learning? 

With the fast growth of new technology, animation has become increasingly accessible to a wide range of educators. This allowing teachers to use the resources within their lesson to help create a more enjoyable and interesting education. Ainsworth (2008) believes that most information is hard to explain just by telling therefore, by offering a variety of teaching styles, with the use of animation, students are able to achieve a better understanding of the new information that is given to them. According to Pollmuller and Sercombe (2011) animation is flexible in many ways and can be easily integrated into a variety of subjects other than ICT. One example by Pollmuller and Sercombe is how the stop-frames and calculating the pace of the animation can have an effect of mental arithmetic within mathematics. Animation within education has become an attractive form of transmit information to students. Due to the dynamic and engaging way of illustrating images, animation is able to instruct students greater than a static images  (Lowe, 2003).
However, Ainsworth (2008) did notice that even though there were many advantages to integrating animation there were also disadvantages. One such issues was whether or not the children did gain a full understanding of what the animation was trying to put across. Therefore, by allowing the children to create their own animation, they were able to gain a true visual insight to how animation work and create meaning. 


References


Ainsworth, S. (2008) 'How do animations Influence Learning?', in D. Robinson and G. Schraw (eds.) Current Perspective on Cognition, Learning, and Instruction: Recent Innovations in Educational Technology that Facilitate Student Learning. pp 37-67.


Lowe, R. K. (2003) Animation and Learning: Selective Processing of Information in Dynamic Graphics. Learning and Instruction, 13, (2), pp. 157-176.

Pollmuller, B. and Sercombe, M. (2011) The Teachers' Animation Toolkit. London: Continuum International Publishing Group.











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