From Clicking to Moving: Embodied Micro-Movements as a New Modality for Data Literacy Learning
Annabella Sakunkoo, Jonathan Sakunkoo
TLDR
Kinetiq introduces embodied micro-movements for data literacy learning, enhancing engagement and motivation while maintaining learning gains.
Key contributions
- Introduces Kinetiq, a novel system integrating full-body micro-movements into data and numeracy problem solving.
- Presents a task-integrated movement paradigm for data literacy learning, replacing clicks with natural gestures.
- Developed Kinetiq as a cross-platform web/mobile app, enabling full-body learning in everyday spaces.
- Preliminary study shows Kinetiq boosts enjoyment, engagement, and motivation with comparable learning gains.
Why it matters
Addressing sedentary digital learning, this paper introduces Kinetiq, a system using embodied micro-movements for data literacy. It boosts learner engagement and motivation, offering a more active, enjoyable path to essential data skills.
Original Abstract
Widespread digital learning has expanded access to education but has resulted in highly sedentary, click-based interaction, contributing to digital fatigue, reduced cognitive flexibility, and health risks associated with prolonged passive screen time. Meanwhile, data literacy has become an essential competency in a data-driven society, yet it is typically taught through passive, disembodied interfaces that offer little physical engagement. We present Kinetiq (Kinetic+IQ), a novel system that integrates fun, full-body micro-movements directly into data and numeracy problem solving. Instead of selecting answers with a mouse, learners interact through natural gestures such as reaching, dodging, heading, elbowing, or knee-raising, thus turning abstract data problem-solving into embodied experiences that integrate thinking with movement. In a preliminary within-subjects study comparing Kinetiq with conventional platforms, participants reported significantly higher affective valence, enjoyment, engagement, and motivation, while maintaining comparable learning gains. We contribute: (1) a task-integrated movement paradigm for data learning, (2) a cross-platform web and mobile app system enabling full-body learning in constrained everyday spaces, and (3) preliminary empirical evidence that embodied micro-movements can enrich the affective experience of data literacy learning.
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