Disentangling the effects of flipped classroom instruction in EFL secondary education: When is it effective and for whom?

Marlene Wagner, Detlef Urhahne

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Flipped classroom refers to an instructional approach in which students study educational videos at home and do homework assignments in class. The present study aims to compare flipped classroom with other forms of video-based instruction and determine which types of students benefit most from video-based instruction. Thirty-eight EFL school classes with 848 ninth-grade students took part in a quasi-experimental pre-post-test intervention study over four weeks. Two independent variables were completely crossed resulting in four experimental conditions: video (at home vs. in class) and instructional method (student-centred vs. teacher-centred). Multilevel analysis reveals that all four experimental conditions were equally effective in promoting students’ learning gains. At-risk, average and excellent students profited least from the learning conditions. The study constitutes a first step towards a comprehensive evaluation of flipped classroom by using a better-controlled research design and may contribute to a more objective discussion about the positive effects of flipped classroom.
Original languageEnglish
Article number101490
Number of pages10
JournalLearning and Instruction
Volume75
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2021

Fields of science

  • 502052 Business administration
  • 503 Educational Sciences
  • 503002 Applied education
  • 503007 Didactics
  • 503014 Subject didactics of social sciences
  • 503030 Business education
  • 501016 Educational psychology
  • 501003 Occupational psychology
  • 501011 Cognitive psychology
  • 603102 Epistemology
  • 503001 General education
  • 503005 Vocational education
  • 503006 Educational research
  • 503025 School pedagogy

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