TY - JOUR
T1 - A meta-analysis of the impact of virtual experiments on students’ development
AU - Wang, Yubiao
AU - Jiang, Xueyi
AU - Hu, Jing
AU - Hou, Chunxiao
AU - Li, Baomin
AU - Wang, Qiyun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - At present, the academic community has yet to reach a consensus on whether virtual experiments can effectively promote student development. To achieve this goal, this study employs a meta-analysis approach to quantitatively examine the impact of virtual experimental teaching on student development. The analysis includes 54 experimental and quasi-experimental studies published in international English-language journals between 2010 and 2023. The research results showed that: 1) Virtual experiments had a medium degree of positive effect on student development, and there was no significant difference in cognitive development, emotional development, and behavioral development. 2) Virtual experiments could better promote student development applied to procedural knowledge teaching. 3) The use of the virtual experiment combined with mixed learning (including observational and operational learning) was more effective in promoting student development. 4) Inquiry-based and task-driven approaches had a greater impact on student development. 5) There was a positive linear relationship between student development supported by virtual experiments and the experiment cycle. 6) Virtual experiments with high embodied learning degrees such as whole-body interaction and body-involved interaction had a more obvious promotion effect on student development. These analyses provided valuable insights and guidance for the design, development, and instructional application of future virtual experiments.
AB - At present, the academic community has yet to reach a consensus on whether virtual experiments can effectively promote student development. To achieve this goal, this study employs a meta-analysis approach to quantitatively examine the impact of virtual experimental teaching on student development. The analysis includes 54 experimental and quasi-experimental studies published in international English-language journals between 2010 and 2023. The research results showed that: 1) Virtual experiments had a medium degree of positive effect on student development, and there was no significant difference in cognitive development, emotional development, and behavioral development. 2) Virtual experiments could better promote student development applied to procedural knowledge teaching. 3) The use of the virtual experiment combined with mixed learning (including observational and operational learning) was more effective in promoting student development. 4) Inquiry-based and task-driven approaches had a greater impact on student development. 5) There was a positive linear relationship between student development supported by virtual experiments and the experiment cycle. 6) Virtual experiments with high embodied learning degrees such as whole-body interaction and body-involved interaction had a more obvious promotion effect on student development. These analyses provided valuable insights and guidance for the design, development, and instructional application of future virtual experiments.
KW - Virtual experiment
KW - augmented reality technology
KW - meta-analysis
KW - students’ development
KW - virtual reality technology
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105011688909
U2 - 10.1080/10494820.2025.2536574
DO - 10.1080/10494820.2025.2536574
M3 - 文献综述
AN - SCOPUS:105011688909
SN - 1049-4820
JO - Interactive Learning Environments
JF - Interactive Learning Environments
ER -