The impact of social robots' presence and roles on children's performance in musical instrument practice

IF 6.7 1区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH British Journal of Educational Technology Pub Date : 2023-12-07 DOI:10.1111/bjet.13416
Heqiu Song, Emilia I. Barakova, Jaap Ham, Panos Markopoulos
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Abstract

Research on the educational applications of social robots has shown how they can motivate children and help improve academic learning outcomes. Here, we examine how robots can support skill learning and, more specifically, musical instrument practice. Drawing from social facilitation theory and evaluation apprehension theory we expected that the robot's mere presence would impact children's performance and that this effect would be contingent upon the children expecting the robot to evaluate their performance. We report an experiment with children (N = 31) aged nine to twelve who practiced a familiar and new piece alone, in the presence of an evaluative robot, and in the presence of a non-evaluative robot. We found that children performed better in terms of rhythm, pitch, and general impression in the presence of the non-evaluative robot. These findings offer important insights for designing robot tutors for music learning.

Practitioner notes

What is already known about this topic

  • Social robots have been applied in different educational scenarios (e.g., second language, math, and programming) and were proven to be beneficial for children's motivation.
  • Musical instrument learning requires practice, perseverance, and social support to become successful.
  • Social robots can be used as a provider of social support during musical instrument practice.
  • Children tend to perform better on easy or well-rehearsed tasks and worse on complex tasks or new ones with the presence of observers, but only when they believe the observer can evaluate them.

What this paper adds

  • Social robots are beneficial for children's performance in musical instrument learning.
  • Limited evidence was found to prove that children tend to perform better on old melodies and worse on new melodies in the presence of a social robot. However, the results confirmed that the level of evaluative of the robot matters.
  • Children tend to have better performance with the robot that did not provide evaluative comments when practicing a new melody (a difficult task) than alone and with the robot that offered evaluative comments.
  • This study confirmed that social robots can provide support to children in practicing music, helping to improve their performance.

Implications for practice and/or policy

  • Social facilitation and evaluation apprehension effects need to be taken into consideration during the behaviour design of companion robots in learning scenarios.
  • Robots, which were intended to motivate children in learning, should be designed to not provide evaluative comments.

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社交机器人的存在和角色对儿童乐器练习表现的影响
有关社交机器人教育应用的研究表明,它们可以激发儿童的学习动机,帮助提高学习成绩。在此,我们将研究机器人如何支持技能学习,特别是乐器练习。借鉴社交促进理论和评价忧虑理论,我们预计机器人的存在将影响儿童的表现,而这种影响将取决于儿童是否期待机器人对他们的表现进行评价。我们报告了一项实验,实验对象是九到十二岁的儿童(31 人),他们分别单独练习了一首熟悉的和新的乐曲,在有评价机器人在场的情况下,以及在没有评价机器人在场的情况下。我们发现,在非评价型机器人在场的情况下,儿童在节奏、音高和总体印象方面表现得更好。这些发现为设计音乐学习机器人辅导员提供了重要启示。
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来源期刊
British Journal of Educational Technology
British Journal of Educational Technology EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
15.60
自引率
4.50%
发文量
111
期刊介绍: BJET is a primary source for academics and professionals in the fields of digital educational and training technology throughout the world. The Journal is published by Wiley on behalf of The British Educational Research Association (BERA). It publishes theoretical perspectives, methodological developments and high quality empirical research that demonstrate whether and how applications of instructional/educational technology systems, networks, tools and resources lead to improvements in formal and non-formal education at all levels, from early years through to higher, technical and vocational education, professional development and corporate training.
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