On this page you will find information on how to make the most of recorded lectures.
Having access to recorded lectures is very popular with students but many don't get the most out of it. This guide outlines some key ideas you can use to learn better from recorded lectures.
If you just want to learn how to use the video player better, you can go straight to the Panopto guide for students.
To get the most out of the recorded lectures available to you, consider some of these evidence-based tips and ideas.
You should go to lectures. Students who attend lectures are more successful at learning than those who don't. But do not confuse attending the lecture with learning. Attending is better than not attending but you also need to engage. Here five ways of making the most out of your lectures:
Remember, lectures are an important part of the learning process but you still need to spend time making what you heard your own.
Attending a lecture gives you a chance to focus, block time when you're doing nothing else, and be with others doing the same activity. These are powerful signals for learning.
But you can never say, I've attended a lecture, I've learned. Most of the actual learning will happen before and after the lecture, as you're planning, reflecting, taking notes, or revising. Make sure all of these activities are a part of your routine.
All students like the idea of having recorded lectures. But we know from the view numbers that most of them don't watch most of the videos. This is partly because it seems like such a daunting task to go through so much material again. And even if you only go to watch a part of the video, it's much harder to skim for gist or to scan to get to the most important parts. Here are some tips.
Following these tips will help you avoid binge watching your lectures at the last minute. This is the least effective way of learning difficult concepts because you are increasing the cognitive load. See next section for more tips on how to manage this.
Compared to reading, video can put more demands on your working memory. Working memory is how much you can keep in your mind at once to do mental operations. Everybody's working memory is limited. There are only so many chunks of information it can hold. But the chunks you put in working memory can be very large and rich. That's how mnemonic devices or metaphors work. You associate something that's already rich in meaning with something with which you don't have any meaningful association. So paradoxically, you can remember a new thing better by putting more things in your memory with it.
Video is a continuous stream of sounds and images which can put an extra load on your working memory. This is called cognitive load. But because video is also rich and full of useful signals, it can give your working memory the richness it needs to process bigger chunks of information.
Here are some tips for managing your cognitive load while watching the video.
The Panopto video player has many features that are very much underused. Make sure you've tried them all. But also check in with yourself after a while if there's a feature you wanted to use but are not taking advantage of.
See the Panopto guide for more details about:
Learning is a skill and you can get better at it. One way to improve at any skill is to pause and reflect on your practice. How well is what you're doing working for you? Are there areas where you struggle and a change could help? And most importantly keep track of what you're doing and how you're progressing. Do not rely on your memory. Keep a learning diary.
You are not alone. Make talking to other students a part of your reflection. Ask them how they study, what works for them. Share what you do. See if you can learn from each other but remember almost everything works for someone and nothing works for everyone. So experiment with what works for you.
There are many people online sharing their process. Take advantage of the advice but always consult more than one source to get more points of view.
The advice on this page is based on a body of good evidence.
The importance of attending lectures for success has been shown in a number of studies. A large meta analysis of 68 studies in 2010 showed a strong link between attendance and grades (Credé, Roch, and Kieszczynka 2010). A more recent systematic review has shown that 85% of 27 studies conducted in the human biosciences reported a positive association between lecture attendance and academic success (Doggrell 2020).
The importance of reducing cognitive load while watching videos has been replicated in a number of studies. Clark and Mayer (2016) summarised 30 years of research in this area as the 10 principles of multimedia learning. One of the key insights of their work is that minimising cognitive load is especially beneficial for beginners. They also show the benefit of viewers controlling the video playback.
Memory (and working memory in particular) is still an active area of research and there are many unknowns. But the key insight that you can overcome its limits by increasing the size of chunks goes back to a famous paper by G. A. Miller (1956). More recently Anders Ericsson has leveraged the idea to help understand expert performance (Ericsson and Pool 2016). Ericsson's framework also stresses the importance of reflection on the learning process for improvement and the importance of focusing on areas of difficulty.
The benefits of active engagement, writing summaries and working questions out with your peers has been summarised in the ICAP framework by Chi and Wylie (2014). It draws on a number of studies showing that simple behaviours such as stopping and pausing a video can be a signal of more active engagement that leads to better learning. This is then magnified if students create something new - such as summaries or mind maps and then have a discussion about it with others (Chi and Menekse 2015).
Using concept maps for working out difficult concepts has been found to improve understanding in a number of studies and the positive association was confirmed by two systematic reviews (Nesbit and Adesope 2006; Hay, Kinchin, and Lygo‐Baker 2008).
Research on how speed of playback impacts comprehension is still too new for a systematic review but early studies indicate that with practice people listening at a speed of up 2x can maintain comprehension (Nagahama and Morita 2018). Another recent study also suggested that students who watch at higher speeds 1.25x watch more videos (Lang et al. 2020). However, there is also one study that showed that beginners who were asked to watch videos at higher speeds without preparation did less well on a test (Song et al. 2018).
Much of this research only confirms what is known from the study skills literature. Stella Cotrell’s Study Skills Handbook (2019) is a very readable overview full of useful tips on how you can improve your learning.