Utilizing virtual reality to assist social competence education and social support for children from under-represented backgrounds
Date
01/08/2023Keywords
Metadata
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Abstract
Although education is a fundamental human right for global citizens, educational inequality still exists within and among countries. Still today, many students struggle to access and receive quality education. Therefore, the value of using immersive technology to increase social competence and perceived social support for children who live in remote areas of the world, reduce inequality, and improve the quality of education requires much attention to address the lacuna between urban and rural education systems. Based on three representative pedagogies (Pedagogy of Technology, Play-based Learning, and Traditional Pedagogy), we designed three social competence educational approaches – virtual reality (VR) assisted social competence education, Lego social competence education, and traditional classroom learning – and applied them to interventions in two rural schools in Southwest China. Our results showed that VR and Lego social competence education prompted children's social competence and perceived social support with elementary school children (Study 1). Furthermore, VR social competence education resulted in substantially greater social competencies and subjective sense of social support than traditional classroom learning with middle school children (Study 2). The results suggest that VR-assisted social competence education (Pedagogy of Technology) could be a potential tool to reduce educational inequalities in underdeveloped countries and regions.
Citation
Wang , X , Young , G W , Plechatá , A , Mc Guckin , C & Makransky , G 2023 , ' Utilizing virtual reality to assist social competence education and social support for children from under-represented backgrounds ' , Computers & Education , vol. 201 , 104815 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.compedu.2023.104815
Publication
Computers & Education
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0360-1315Type
Journal article
Rights
© 2023 The Authors. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons CC-BY license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Description
Funding: This publication has emanated from research conducted with the financial support of Trinity College Dublin-China Scholarship Council Joint Scholarship (ID 202008300006) and Horizon Europe Framework Program (HORIZON - ID 6101070109).Collections
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