HCDec 23, 2021

Individual and Group-wise Classroom Seating Experience: Effects on Student Engagement in Different Courses

arXiv:2112.12342v3
Originality Incremental advance
AI Analysis

This research addresses the problem of optimizing classroom seating for student engagement, using physiological sensors to reduce subjectivity, but it is incremental as it builds on existing work by adding group behavior analysis.

The study investigated how individual and group seating arrangements affect student engagement, finding that proximity between students correlates with similar perceived engagement and higher physiological synchrony, based on data from 23 students in 10 courses over four weeks.

Seating location in the classroom can affect student engagement, attention and academic performance by providing better visibility, improved movement, and participation in discussions. Existing studies typically explore how traditional seating arrangements (e.g. grouped tables or traditional rows) influence students' perceived engagement, without considering group seating behaviours under more flexible seating arrangements. Furthermore, survey-based measures of student engagement are prone to subjectivity and various response bias. Therefore, in this research, we investigate how individual and group-wise classroom seating experiences affect student engagement using wearable physiological sensors. We conducted a field study at a high school and collected survey and wearable data from 23 students in 10 courses over four weeks. We aim to answer the following research questions: 1. How does the seating proximity between students relate to their perceived learning engagement? 2. How do students' group seating behaviours relate to their physiologically-based measures of engagement (i.e. physiological arousal and physiological synchrony)? Experiment results indicate that the individual and group-wise classroom seating experience is associated with perceived student engagement and physiologically-based engagement measured from electrodermal activity. We also find that students who sit close together are more likely to have similar learning engagement and tend to have high physiological synchrony. This research opens up opportunities to explore the implications of flexible seating arrangements and has great potential to maximize student engagement by suggesting intelligent seating choices in the future.

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