Reading comprehension is a central skill in secondary education. To be able to provide adaptive instruction, teachers need to be able to accurately estimate students’ reading comprehension. However, they tend to experience difficulties doing so. Eye tracking can uncover these reading processes by visualizing what a student looked at, in what order, and for how long, in a gaze display. The question is, however, whether teachers could interpret such displays. We, therefore, examined how teachers interpret gaze displays and perceived their potential use in education to foster tailored support for reading comprehension. Sixty teachers in secondary education were presented with three static gaze displays of students performing a reading comprehe...
International audienceWe present some initial findings obtained from a study on student attention in...
Humans are born to learn by understanding where adults look. This is likely to extend into the class...
In online lectures, unlike in face-to-face lectures, teachers lack access to (nonverbal) cues to che...
Reading comprehension is a central skill in secondary education. To be able to provide adaptive inst...
The exploratory study presented in the poster is part of a larger research project investigating tea...
Publisher Copyright: © 2021, European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction. All righ...
When asked questions, children often avert their gaze. Furthermore, the frequency of such gaze avers...
In online lectures, unlike in face-to-face lectures, teachers lack access to (nonverbal) cues to che...
Mobile eye-tracking research has provided evidence both on teachers' visual attention in relation to...
Reading students' faces and their body language, checking their worksheets, and keeping eye contact ...
As teachers are responsible for responding instantaneously to students’ statements and actions, the ...
Several popular visualizations of gaze data, such as scanpaths and heatmaps, can be used independent...
Classrooms full of pupils can be very overwhelming, both for teachers and students, as well as for t...
This Perspective article discusses the possible contributions of eye-tracking (ET) to the field of E...
Classrooms full of pupils can be very overwhelming, both for teachers and students, as well as for t...
International audienceWe present some initial findings obtained from a study on student attention in...
Humans are born to learn by understanding where adults look. This is likely to extend into the class...
In online lectures, unlike in face-to-face lectures, teachers lack access to (nonverbal) cues to che...
Reading comprehension is a central skill in secondary education. To be able to provide adaptive inst...
The exploratory study presented in the poster is part of a larger research project investigating tea...
Publisher Copyright: © 2021, European Association for Research on Learning and Instruction. All righ...
When asked questions, children often avert their gaze. Furthermore, the frequency of such gaze avers...
In online lectures, unlike in face-to-face lectures, teachers lack access to (nonverbal) cues to che...
Mobile eye-tracking research has provided evidence both on teachers' visual attention in relation to...
Reading students' faces and their body language, checking their worksheets, and keeping eye contact ...
As teachers are responsible for responding instantaneously to students’ statements and actions, the ...
Several popular visualizations of gaze data, such as scanpaths and heatmaps, can be used independent...
Classrooms full of pupils can be very overwhelming, both for teachers and students, as well as for t...
This Perspective article discusses the possible contributions of eye-tracking (ET) to the field of E...
Classrooms full of pupils can be very overwhelming, both for teachers and students, as well as for t...
International audienceWe present some initial findings obtained from a study on student attention in...
Humans are born to learn by understanding where adults look. This is likely to extend into the class...
In online lectures, unlike in face-to-face lectures, teachers lack access to (nonverbal) cues to che...