More challenging or more achievable? The impacts of difficulty and dominant goal orientation in leaderboards within educational gamification

Background As one of the gamification elements, leaderboard, especially absolute leaderboard, is widely used in educational gamification systems. However, empirical studies on the optimal use condition of the leaderboard and underlying influence mechanisms are deficient. Objectives This study explor...

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Published inJournal of computer assisted learning Vol. 38; no. 3; pp. 845 - 860
Main Authors Cao, Yang, Gong, Shao‐Ying, Wang, Zhen, Cheng, Yang, Wang, Yan‐Qing
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Chichester, UK John Wiley & Sons, Inc 01.06.2022
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Summary:Background As one of the gamification elements, leaderboard, especially absolute leaderboard, is widely used in educational gamification systems. However, empirical studies on the optimal use condition of the leaderboard and underlying influence mechanisms are deficient. Objectives This study explored which difficulty was more conducive to learning performance in leaderboard context, and when and how it played a role. Methods To address these questions, this study conducted a 2 (dominant goal orientation: learning/performance) × 2 (difficulty: high/low) between‐subjects design. Seventy‐eight dominant learning‐oriented and 78 dominant performance‐oriented participants were recruited and randomly assigned to the high or low difficulty group respectively. Results and Conclusions Participants in the low difficulty group experienced more positive emotions, less negative emotions, and higher learning motivation than those in the high difficulty group, but the effect of difficulty on performance was not significant. Moreover, goal orientation did not moderate the effects of difficulty, dominant learning‐oriented and performance‐oriented learners were equally affected by difficulty. Further mediating analysis showed that negative emotions and learning motivation rather than positive emotions mediated the relationship between difficulty and learning performance. Implications These results confirmed the positive effect of low difficulty in leaderboard context, as well as the mediating roles of emotions and motivation involved in the relationship between difficulty and learning performance. These findings enlighten us that it is necessary to equip leaderboards in educational gamification with achievable difficulty. Lay Description What is already known about this topic As one of the gamification elements, leaderboard was widely used in educational gamification. The effect of the leaderboard was not always consistent among various educational situations. Empirical studies on the optimal use condition of the leaderboard were deficient. The mechanisms by difficulty within leaderboards affected the learning performance were not clear. What this paper adds Lower difficulty within leaderboards could induce more positive emotions, less negative emotions and higher learning motivation. Difficulty within leaderboards did not directly affect learning performance. Negative emotions and learning motivation mediated the relationship between difficulty and performance. Dominant goal orientation did not moderate the effect of difficulty on learning. The implications of study findings for practitioners We could improve learners' emotional and motivational states by reducing difficulty within leaderboards. We could promote learning performance through appropriate emotional and motivational designs using gamification.
Bibliography:Funding information
Key Laboratory of Adolescent Cyberpsychology and Behavior (CCNU), Ministry of Education/Open Research Fund of the Hubei Key Laboratory of Human Development and Mental Health (CCNU), Grant/Award Number: 2019B04; National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant/Award Number: 61877025
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
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content type line 14
ISSN:0266-4909
1365-2729
DOI:10.1111/jcal.12652