Transcript Document

Community Without Compromise:
Cultivating Interactivity in Online and
Blended Learning Environments
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Tracy W. Smith and Emory Maiden
Appalachian State University
Survey Activity
• Cognitive presence - the extent to which learners are
able to construct and confirm meaning through
sustained personal reflection and shared discourse.
• Social presence - the degree to which participants in
computer-mediated communication feel affectively
connected to each other.
• Teaching presence is the instructor’s design,
facilitation, and direction of cognitive and social
processes for the purpose of realizing personally
meaningful and educationally worthwhile learning
outcomes.
Session Goals
• Articulate rationale for creating community
• Describe strategies for cultivating community
• Identify tools for building community and
enabling communication
Why Community Matters
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Research
Student Needs
Teacher Needs
Institutional Needs
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Research Says…
Psychological distance, or rather lack of
community, in the online learning
environment, can result in student isolation,
frustration, boredom, overload, and low
course completion rates
(Hara & Kling, 2000; Northrup, 2002; Rovai et al., 2005).
On the other hand…
Ascough (2007), Cho, Gay, Davidson, and
Ingraffea (2007), as well as Pate, Smaldino,
Mayall, and Luetkehans (2009) found that
creating online social communities creates
an encouraging environment of shared
activities that results in deeper learning,
higher final course grades, and successful
online courses.
Functioning in a community can enhance
learning, improve academic success, and
contribute to persistence in higher
education (Hargis, 2005; Kember, 1987;
Powers & Mitchell, 1997; Shea, Sau Li, &
Pickett, 2006). Yuen (2003) asserts that a
learning community can help individual
learners “achieve what they cannot on
their own” (p. 155).
Transactional Distance
A psychological and communication space to be
crossed. If learning outcomes in distance
education are to be maximized, transactional
distance needs to be minimized or shortened.
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Transactional Distance
“I believe that the main objective in either
teaching environment is for the subject matter to
be so inspirational, exciting, and challenging that
students think about it beyond the time in class,
whether on campus or online” (Bender, p. 9).
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Student Needs
Clear expectations and procedures
Interaction with classmates and
instructor
Communication
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“…the professor has done a great job
at having a voice in our conversations”
“design of the course makes sure we
all interact with each other”
“great way to have virtual conversations
with my peers”
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“There was NO participation…I could
have gotten the same information
reading the book on my own.”
“No communication, unorganized.
Almost as if he forgot he had an online
class.”
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Teacher Needs
What is sacred to you
about your teaching?
What does your best
teaching look like?
What do you worry that
you will have to
compromise as more of
your classes or class
meetings go online?
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Community of Inquiry
CoI, a process model of online learning,
represents the online educational experience as
arising from the interaction of three presences:
social presence, cognitive presence, and
teaching presence.
At the heart of the CoI framework is the idea
that community, critical reflection, and
knowledge construction are integral to learning,
especially online learning.
https://coi.athabascau.ca/
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• Cognitive presence - the extent to which learners are
able to construct and confirm meaning through
sustained personal reflection and shared discourse.
• Social presence - the degree to which participants in
computer-mediated communication feel affectively
connected to each other.
• Teaching presence is the instructor’s design,
facilitation, and direction of cognitive and social
processes for the purpose of realizing personally
meaningful and educationally worthwhile learning
outcomes.
Each core element on its own is complex and
multidimensional – and then the three together are
interdependent. In a single activity, online teachers and
students can exploit many aspects of the core elements
to cultivate a sense of community.
Balance
Tools vs. Strategies
• Discussion Forum/Webinar as a tool (how)
• Discussion Forum/Webinar as a strategy (why)
• Screencasting, Skype, Google+, Questionnaire,
Quizzes
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Beginnings:
Establishing and Sustaining Community
Instructor immediacy
• initiating discussions
• asking questions
• using self-disclosure
• addressing students
by name
• using inclusive
personal pronouns
• repeating contacts
with students over
time
• responding frequently
to students
• offering praise
• communicating
attentiveness
Beginnings/Activities
• Virtual coffee shop – Welcome Message
• Instructor Introductory Videos (photos, visual
cues, “story”)
• Questionnaires
• Web Conferencing – Synchronous
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Virtual Coffee Shop
http://www.flickr.com/photos/sveinhal/2218475995/
Beginnings/Activities
• Virtual coffee shop – Welcome Message
• Instructor Introductory Videos (photos, visual
cues, “story”)
• Questionnaires
• Web Conferencing – Synchronous
http://www.flickr.com/photos/clothpaperstring/2108137806
Sustaining
• Virtual Coffee Shop – Referencing participants’
interests, questions
• Personal Emails
• Virtual Office Hours
• Synchronous Meetings
• Discussion Forum and Webinars to provide “inprocess” feedback on assignments
– Screen sharing and student ownership
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Ending/Transitioning
• How does the content of this course matter
going forward?
• How does community continue?
• Harvesting
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Goal Setting and Discussion
• Which type of PRESENCE would you like to
increase in your online teaching?
• What might be a first step or strategy you
would like to try?
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References - 1
• Ascough, R. (2007). Welcoming design: Hosting a hospitable online course.
Teaching Theology and Religion, 10(3), 131-136.
• Bender, T. (2012). Discussion-based online teaching to enhance student
learning: Theory, practice, and assessment. Sterling, VA: Stylus.
• Cho, H., Gay, G., Davidson, B., & Ingraffea, A. (2007). Social networks,
communication styles, and learning performance in a CSCL community.
Computers and Education, 49, 309-329.
• Hara, & Kling. (2000). Students’ distress with a web-based distance
education course. Information, Communication, and Society, 3, 557-579.
• Hargis, J. (2005). Collaboration, community, and project-based learning:
Does it still work online? International Journal of Instructional Media,
32(2), 157-162.
• Kember, D. (1987). A longitudinal process model of drop out from distance
education. The Journal of Higher Education, 60(3), 278-301.
References - 2
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Northrup, P.T. (2002). Online learners’ preferences for interaction. The Quarterly
Review of Distance Education, 3(2), 219-226.
Pate, A., Smaldino, S., Mayall, H.J., & Luetkehans, L. (2009). Questioning the
necessity of nonacademic social discussion forums within online courses. The
Quarterly Review of Distance Education, 10(1), 1-8.
Powers, S.M., & Mitchell, J. (1997). Student perceptions and performance in a
virtual classroom environment. Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the
American Educational Research Association, Chicago, IL.
Rovai, A., Wighting, M.J., & Liu, J. (2005). School climate. The Quarterly Review of
Distance Education, 6(4), 361-374.
Shea, P., Li, C.S., & Pickett, A. (2006). A study of teaching presence and student
sense of learning community in fully online and web-enhanced college courses.
Internet & Higher Education, 9 (3), 175-190.
Yuen, A.H. (2003). Fostering learning communities in classrooms: A survey
research of Hong Kong schools. Education Media International, 40, 153-162.