You have a notification: the role of push notifications in shaping students’ engagement, self-regulation and academic procrastination

Abstract The utilization of learning management systems has become pervasive in online learning processes within higher education, thereby underscoring the significance of students’ capacity to manage their learning processes effectively. Nevertheless, deficiencies in students’ self-regulation skill...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Bayram Berkay Mumcu, Ayça Çebi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2025-06-01
Series:International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41239-025-00537-x
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849329361113579520
author Bayram Berkay Mumcu
Ayça Çebi
author_facet Bayram Berkay Mumcu
Ayça Çebi
author_sort Bayram Berkay Mumcu
collection DOAJ
description Abstract The utilization of learning management systems has become pervasive in online learning processes within higher education, thereby underscoring the significance of students’ capacity to manage their learning processes effectively. Nevertheless, deficiencies in students’ self-regulation skills in online learning environments give rise to significant challenges, including poor time management and procrastination. This study aims to examine the effects of push notifications via mobile devices on students’ self-regulation, engagement, and academic procrastination behaviors. The study was a quasi-experimental intervention with 53 students enrolled at a state university. The intervention involved the regular delivery of push notifications to students via the Moodle mobile application and the analysis of students’ engagement, self-regulation, and procrastination behaviors using log data. The results of the study demonstrated that push notifications enhanced students’ engagement and self-regulation skills while reducing academic procrastination. In light of these findings, it is recommended that push notifications be preferred over email or the messaging system as a notification channel to keep students informed of progress in online learning environments.
format Article
id doaj-art-ae0db6f3a9124237936b594d95ca5e5a
institution Kabale University
issn 2365-9440
language English
publishDate 2025-06-01
publisher SpringerOpen
record_format Article
series International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
spelling doaj-art-ae0db6f3a9124237936b594d95ca5e5a2025-08-20T03:47:17ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education2365-94402025-06-0122112210.1186/s41239-025-00537-xYou have a notification: the role of push notifications in shaping students’ engagement, self-regulation and academic procrastinationBayram Berkay Mumcu0Ayça Çebi1Department of Computer Education and Instructional Technology, Trabzon UniversityDepartment of Computer Education and Instructional Technology, Trabzon UniversityAbstract The utilization of learning management systems has become pervasive in online learning processes within higher education, thereby underscoring the significance of students’ capacity to manage their learning processes effectively. Nevertheless, deficiencies in students’ self-regulation skills in online learning environments give rise to significant challenges, including poor time management and procrastination. This study aims to examine the effects of push notifications via mobile devices on students’ self-regulation, engagement, and academic procrastination behaviors. The study was a quasi-experimental intervention with 53 students enrolled at a state university. The intervention involved the regular delivery of push notifications to students via the Moodle mobile application and the analysis of students’ engagement, self-regulation, and procrastination behaviors using log data. The results of the study demonstrated that push notifications enhanced students’ engagement and self-regulation skills while reducing academic procrastination. In light of these findings, it is recommended that push notifications be preferred over email or the messaging system as a notification channel to keep students informed of progress in online learning environments.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41239-025-00537-xPush notificationEngagementSelf-regulationAcademic procrastinationExperimental design
spellingShingle Bayram Berkay Mumcu
Ayça Çebi
You have a notification: the role of push notifications in shaping students’ engagement, self-regulation and academic procrastination
International Journal of Educational Technology in Higher Education
Push notification
Engagement
Self-regulation
Academic procrastination
Experimental design
title You have a notification: the role of push notifications in shaping students’ engagement, self-regulation and academic procrastination
title_full You have a notification: the role of push notifications in shaping students’ engagement, self-regulation and academic procrastination
title_fullStr You have a notification: the role of push notifications in shaping students’ engagement, self-regulation and academic procrastination
title_full_unstemmed You have a notification: the role of push notifications in shaping students’ engagement, self-regulation and academic procrastination
title_short You have a notification: the role of push notifications in shaping students’ engagement, self-regulation and academic procrastination
title_sort you have a notification the role of push notifications in shaping students engagement self regulation and academic procrastination
topic Push notification
Engagement
Self-regulation
Academic procrastination
Experimental design
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41239-025-00537-x
work_keys_str_mv AT bayramberkaymumcu youhaveanotificationtheroleofpushnotificationsinshapingstudentsengagementselfregulationandacademicprocrastination
AT aycacebi youhaveanotificationtheroleofpushnotificationsinshapingstudentsengagementselfregulationandacademicprocrastination