Auflistung nach Autor:in "Gómez Chova, Luis"
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- PublikationAutomation of Kahoot! by the humanoid robot Pepper – Comparing results from classes – Robot vs. lecturers(2023) Dannecker, Achim; Hertig, Daniel; Gómez Chova, Luis; González Martínez, Chelo; Lees, Joanna [in: INTED2023 Proceedings]Digitization is taking place unchallenged in all areas of life. The accompanying automation is an integral part of this development. This development does not stop in the "classroom" either. Be it that the use of mobile devices is increasingly becoming part of the interaction with students, be it that online offers such as Massive Open Online Course (MOOC) are increasingly used in the context of education or video conferencing systems for teaching such as Adobe Connect. In the future, it would also be conceivable for robots to take over parts of the interaction in the classroom. To check the students' knowledge level or for repetition purposes, there is the possibility to conduct quizzes via Moodle or other platforms. These quizzes are rather traditional and not particularly stimulating, so that there is no great incentive for students to take them unless learning points or similar are awarded. Not everywhere are these types of quizzes used in the classroom. Game-based learning platforms like Kahoot! are finding more and more use in teaching. The quizzes that can be conducted via the Kahoot! web service are more exciting and entertaining for students than those that are possible via Moodle, for example. By conducting quizzes via the web service Kahoot!, they can be made more exciting and entertaining for the students, since, for example, the results after each question are visible to everyone, thus adding a competitive and playful aspect. Nevertheless, if game-based learning platforms such as Kahoot! are used, the quiz progress is generally not commented, but rather "worked through". We have implemented a service that enables the humanoid robot Pepper to do a Kahoot! quiz in class. The service enables Pepper to conduct quizzes independently and with commentary possibilities. Unlike a simple PC, Pepper can use gestures and interactions such as eye contact and changing colors to make the interaction more "human" and emotional. The inclusion of Pepper as the moderator of the quiz might increase its appeal to students and an additional innovative aspect will be added to the quiz. By using the robot, lecturers can be relieved and quizzes that have already been prepared can be conducted without much effort even by people who are not familiar with the subject or inexperienced. The robot is able to keep track of the complete course of the quiz at any time and to comment on it (e.g. now on the first place is…). The execution by "Pepper" would generally have five special aspects: 1. students are given an outlook into the future social interaction of robots and humans. 2. the course of the quiz can be commented by a robot. 3. the quiz can be conducted independently of lecturers. 4. students can experience social interaction with robots themselves and use this experience for the future. We have done several quizzes in different classes with 89 students that experiences Pepper as a moderator and 317 students that experienced lecturers as a moderator. In both settings the students got the same preparation tasks and the same questions within Kahoot! As an outlook it can be seen that the results in both settings a similar in the range of correct answers, time the students need to answer the questions and average of final results.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationCurriculum Design and Innovation - Teaching Digital Innovation and Technology(IATED Academy, 2019) Eisenbart, Barbara; Kirch, Johannes; Gómez Chova, Luis; López Martínez, Augustín; Candel Torres, Ignacio [in: INTED2019 Proceedings]Since information is increasingly digitalized, digital innovation combines a physical solution with a digital aspect. The concept of digital innovation includes three types of innovation – product and process innovation as well as business model innovation. Our paper shows how students developed innovative solutions for real-life business problems through applying technologies of Augmented Reality (AR) or Virtual Reality (VR) in a Master course on digital innovation. Contributions explored the possible role of these digital technologies and developed new types of business solutions, which were evaluated regarding innovativeness and usefulness. For the project work, diverse student teams were built considering a mixture of nationality, gender, age, and educational background in order to foster different perspectives and enhance team results. Concluding our paper, results of a four-step learning evaluation process and its learnings are shown. Possible course adaptions and future research directions are discus04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationEqualdigitalent - Fostering entrepreneurship and digital skills under diversity aspects(IATED Academy, 2019) Kirch, Johannes; Eisenbart, Barbara; Gómez Chova, Luis; López Martínez, Agustín; Candel Torres, Ignacio [in: EDULEARN19 Proceedings]Teaching entrepreneurship is an important mission of academic education. The digital age calls for digital skills of potential entrepreneurs. The potential of especially female entrepreneurs need to be exploited. To develop an ability to deal with entrepreneurial opportunities requires a transformation of didactics, pedagogy, and the university context. The EqualDigitalent initiative drafted and tested a master curriculum to foster entrepreneurship and digital skills in academic education under diversity aspects. Results of a four-step learning evaluation process are provided as well as improvement opportunities and learnings are derived. A distinct focus of this paper is to show comprehensive results and indications for possible adaptions of the overall master curriculum. For example, group projects increased students' ICT skills as well as their ability to work in heterogeneous work. Starting points for similar initiatives and future research directions are deduced.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationEvidence-based good teaching succeeds face-2-face and online(IATED, 2022) Dannecker, Achim; Hanke, Ulrike; Gómez Chova, Luis; López Martínez, Agustín; Lees, Joanna [in: ICERI2022 Proceedings]Triggered by the Corona pandemic and the experience gained with online teaching as a result, questions are increasingly being asked today about the extent to which online teaching should continue to play a role in university teaching in the future. This raises the question of what actually characterizes good university teaching and which teaching formats enable good university teaching. Therefore, in this paper we would like to compile the research results from teaching-learning research regarding the quality of university teaching and from this compile overarching criteria of evidence-based good university teaching. Based on this, we would like to take a look at the research on the effectiveness of online teaching. Our thesis is that online teaching per se has no higher or lower effectiveness than face-to-face teaching, but rather that the quality of teaching formats is ensured by the implementation of the criteria of good teaching, which goes in different teaching formats. This leads to the hypothesis that university teaching can be effective and good in any teaching format if these criteria are taken into account. In order to test this hypothesis practically in a study of our own, a face-to-face course designed on the basis of findings about evidence-based good teaching was converted to a purely online format from one day to another. The switch from face-to-face to pure online was made without adapting the course materials or the didactic concept in the core. In this way, the evaluation results of both teaching formats could be directly compared. In addition, the evaluation results of these events were also compared with the evaluation results of all other events at the university in order to determine whether events that take evidence-based criteria of good teaching into account are really evaluated better. What is good teaching anyway? How can we measure what good teaching is? Like many studies, including Ulrich (2020), we would like to define good teaching here: (1) as teaching that is well evaluated by students and (2) as teaching that is conducive to learning. Thus, in the first case, student evaluation results are used to elaborate criteria for good teaching; in the second case, learning success using grades or scores on achievement tests are used as variables for good teaching. To elaborate evidence-based criteria for good teaching, we consulted the syntheses of Schneider and Preckel (2017), of Ulrich (2020), and of Schneider and Mustafic (2015) and use the criteria of good teaching reported there. These have been compiled by the respective authors from meta-analyses. In total the evaluation of four semesters (approx. 800 students) pre COVID19 and three semesters (approx. 600 students) during COVID19 are compared. As a first outlook it can be said that the satisfaction during COVID19 remained as good as before, the learning success was slightly lower. Compared to all other courses, the gap became larger in the first semester, but this levelled out somewhat over the three semesters. To an overall higher rating.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationInnovative learning models to master the digital transformation in the audit profession(2020) Canipa, Marco; Grimberg, Frank; Gómez Chova, Luis; López Martínez, Agustín; Candel Torres, Ignacio [in: EDULEARN20 Proceedings]The fourth industrial revolution is in full swing. The digitalization of living and working environments is changing our society and thus the way we learn. Under these conditions, audit work is becoming even more process-oriented, networked and with a more holistic audit focus. Universities - like the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland (FHNW) - are playing a crucial part at an early stage on the career path of an auditor. Hence, there is a strong need to react on the digital transformation in the audit profession by implementing innovative learning models in a way that graduates bring newly required competencies and qualifications into their job as an auditor of tomorrow.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationIntroducing case study audio podcasts in business and information systems studies(2023) Jäger, Janine; Korkut, Safak; Inglese, Terry; Schmiedel, Theresa [in: EDULEARN23. Conference proceedings. 15th International Conference on Education and New Learning Technologies, Palma (Spain), 3rd-5th of July, 2023]The paper presents a project of the School of Business of the University of Applied Sciences and Arts Northwestern Switzerland in which the project team is developing case study podcasts together with Swiss-based technology startups to apply them in case-based teaching in Business and Information Systems study programs. The goal of the project is to facilitate students' access to case study contexts by allowing them to listen to podcasts for self-study and develop solutions for practice-oriented business and technology challenges in the classroom and guided group work. This provides an engaging blended learning approach for the students through increased motivation to consume the learning material as well as a deeper connection to the study material, compared to the more commonly applied text-based case studies. This can enable much more productive classroom discussions and group work and could therefore provide improved learning outcomes, such as increased reflection, critical thinking, as well as analytical and problem-solving skills. The paper enriches the blended learning debate with details about the case study podcast production from a content-related, technological and didactical perspective as well as provides insights into the planned evaluation of the application of case study podcasts with regard to learning outcomes.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationPreparing management science students for the digitalization era(IATED, 2019) Dannecker, Achim; Telesko, Rainer; Knechtli, Hanspeter; Gómez Chova, Luis; López Martínez, Agustín; Candel Torres, Ignacio [in: EDULEARN19. Conference Proceedings]One of the big challenges today are innovative teaching concepts for business students in the area of digitalization. At the beginning of their study, students mostly understand only the basics of IT mainly related to their private (mobile) environment and not real business scenarios such as data management, outsourcing and/or business process management.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationStudents struggle in coming back to face-2-face teaching in evidence based good teaching settings(IATED, 2023) Dannecker, Achim; Hanke, Ulrike; Gómez Chova, Luis; González Martínez, Chelo; Lees, Joanna [in: INTED2023 Proceedings]Triggered by the Corona pandemic and the experience gained with online teaching as a result, questions are increasingly being asked today about the extent to which online teaching should continue to play a role in university teaching in the future. This raises the question of what actually characterizes good university teaching and which teaching formats enable good university teaching. Therefore, in this paper we would like to compile the research results from teaching-learning research regarding the quality of university teaching and from this compile overarching criteria of evidence-based good university teaching. Based on this, we would like to take a look at the research on the effectiveness of online teaching. Our thesis is that online teaching per se has no higher or lower effectiveness than face-to-face teaching, but rather that the quality of teaching formats is ensured by the implementation of the criteria of good teaching, which goes in different teaching formats. This leads to the hypothesis that university teaching can be effective and good in any teaching format if these criteria are taken into account. In order to test this hypothesis practically in a study of our own, a face-to-face course designed on the basis of findings about evidence-based good teaching was converted to a purely online format from one day to another. The switch from face-to-face to pure online was made without adapting the course materials or the didactic concept in the core. In this way, the evaluation results of both teaching formats could be directly compared. In addition, the evaluation results of these events were also compared with the evaluation results of all other events at the university in order to determine whether events that take evidence-based criteria of good teaching into account are really evaluated better. Finally, we switched in spring semester 2022 back to face-2-face teaching, again without any changes. What is good teaching anyway? How can we measure what good teaching is? Like many studies, including Ulrich (2020), we would like to define good teaching here: (1) as teaching that is well evaluated by students and (2) as teaching that is conducive to learning. Thus, in the first case, student evaluation results are used to elaborate criteria for good teaching; in the second case, learning success using grades or scores on achievement tests are used as variables for good teaching. To elaborate evidence-based criteria for good teaching, we consulted the syntheses of Schneider and Preckel (2017), of Ulrich (2020), and of Schneider and Mustafic (2015) and use the criteria of good teaching reported there. These have been compiled by the respective authors from meta-analyses. In total the evaluation of four semesters (approx. 800 students) pre COVID19 and three semesters (approx. 600 students) during COVID19 are compared and last post COVID19 the first semester (approx. 200 students). As a first outlook it can be said that the satisfaction during COVID19 remained as good as before, the learning success was slightly lower. Compared to all other courses, the gap became larger in the first semester, but this leveled out somewhat over the three semesters. To an overall higher rating. In the post COVID19 semester this changed. The evaluation became a bit worse as well as the evaluation.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationTeaching each semester 12 classes with 7 lectures in a case study and flipped classroom setting(2019) Dannecker, Achim; Gómez Chova, Luis; López Martínez, Augustín; Candel Torres, Ignacio [in: ICERI 2019. 12th International Conference of Education, Research and Innovation. Conference proceedings]The objective of the paper is to outline how the switch from a classical ex-cathedra teaching of the topics business process management and project management in two different and separated courses to an integrated case study based and flipped classroom format changed the perception of the students as well as the outcome in learning and exam result. This paper will also show, how the course was evaluated by more than 300 students and what is important due to lecture performance and dean alignment. It has shown, that the lectures must commit to the set-up as well as the dean, otherwise parts of the students are more likely to engage less in the course. In addition, it is also shown, how the knowledge exchange between the lectures was done and what the experiences were in trying to teach “the same way” amongst the different teachers and classes with the same learning objectives and at the end the same exam, based on more than 50 peer visits of lecture.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift
- PublikationThe role of gamification in the development of (fake) news literacy in higher education(IATED, 2023) Jäger, Janine; Eisemann, Christoph; Pimmer, Christoph; Gómez Chova, Luis; González Martínez, Chelo; Lees, Joanna [in: EDULEARN23. Proceedings]Fake news has become a major societal concern, particularly in the online and social media sphere. Higher education institutions have an important role to play in fostering critical thinking and promoting media and news literacy. Therefore, educators need to explore effective and innovative ways to teach news literacy. Online games have emerged as a potentially promising tool. Against this background, the paper presents a framework that conceptualises competences relevant for news literacy and 'fake' news literacy. It then uses the framework to conduct an evaluation of 17 popular and freely available online games about misinformation and disinformation and their suitability for developing competences relevant to (fake) news literacy in a higher education context. The findings indicate that the games were generally limited in scope and covered only specific news literacy competence areas. The paper discusses the results of the analysis and develops some suggestions for the integration of games in the higher education landscape.04B - Beitrag Konferenzschrift