AI-gamified teaching in music education: Implications for student learning and engagement

dc.contributor.authorMeiyu Li
dc.contributor.authorThanin Ratanaolarn
dc.contributor.authorSirirat Petsangsri
dc.date.accessioned2026-05-08T19:25:42Z
dc.date.issued2025-11-17
dc.description.abstractThis study explores how blending AI and gamification boosts music theory learning and student engagement, a gap in current research. A 14-week quasi-experiment with 180 first-year music students (90 per group) compared an AI-gamified approach to traditional teaching. Pre-tests found no differences in initial proficiency (EG: 52.18±8.36; CG: 51.75±8.62) or engagement. Post-intervention, the AI-gamified group scored 83.42±7.45 in music theory—far higher than the control’s 62.31±9.18 (p<0.001)—with 59.9% improvement versus 20.4%. They also excelled in behavioral, emotional, cognitive, and social engagement (all p<0.001), with overall scores of 52.38±5.76 versus 39.72±6.93. Success stems from gamification fueling intrinsic motivation, AI tailoring guidance, and tech easing collaboration. The findings back using such tools in music classes, with educator training in adaptive methods advised. Limitations include a small, short-term sample; future work should explore long-term impacts and individual variations.
dc.identifier.doi10.53894/ijirss.v8i11.10896
dc.identifier.urihttps://dspace.kmitl.ac.th/handle/123456789/20232
dc.publisherInternational Journal of Innovative Research and Scientific Studies
dc.subjectDiverse Music Education Insights
dc.subjectEducational Games and Gamification
dc.subjectNeuroscience and Music Perception
dc.titleAI-gamified teaching in music education: Implications for student learning and engagement
dc.typeArticle

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