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Teaching social-emotional learning with immersive virtual technology: Exploratory considerations
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Type
Book chapter
Citation
Tan, M. C. C., Chye, S. Y. L., & Min, T. S. (2023). Teaching social-emotional learning with immersive virtual technology: Exploratory considerations. In S. Y. L. Chye & B. L. Chua (Eds.), Pedagogy and psychology in digital education (pp. 169-195). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-99-2107-2_10
Abstract
Virtual Reality (VR) and Immersive Virtual Environments (IVEs) are increasingly becoming employed in the classroom to facilitate embodied forms of experiential learning in sensorially rich contexts. This chapter presents the findings of a study conducted with 15-year-old students in a Singapore school. The study evaluated the effectiveness of IVEs as a novel pedagogical approach to the teaching of social and emotional competencies, in the context of Character and Citizenship Education; it sought to ascertain if the affordances of VR and IVEs—immersion, presence and embodiment—when accompanied by real-world narratives would facilitate greater empathy, perspective-taking and responsible decision-making. Students were divided into three treatment conditions: IVEs, “pen-and-paper” mental simulation and video-viewing, and each treatment contained a problem scenario that involved an ethical dilemma young people in Singapore today face. A quasi-experimental, pre-test post-test, non-equivalent group design was employed and the study adopted a mixed-method approach to data collection. The findings show how IVEs can effectively facilitate perspective-taking and empathy, and this is due to its ability to immerse the user in the fictional space of the narrative, thereby encouraging a deeper sense of presence and embodiment.
ISBN
9789819921065 (print)
9789819921072 (online)
Publisher
Springer
DOI
10.1007/978-981-99-2107-2_10
Project
OER04/18 MT
Funding Agency
Ministry of Education, Singapore