Zehra Akyol & Randy Garrison. Theoretical Background Research Question Methodology Results Discussion Conclusion.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Eli Collins-Brown, Ed.D. Illinois State University July 12, 2006 Aspects of Online Courses That Are More Effective and Successful than Traditional, Face-to-Face.
Advertisements

Toward a Population Parameter for "Communities of Inquiry" in Higher Education, Asynchronous Course Forums Paul Gorsky, Avner Caspi, Ina Blau & Yael David.
Creating the Map To Set the Direction. Educational Positioning System (EPS – a play on GPS)
Introduction to Service-Learning for Students
Writing Research Questions
TEACHING-LEARNING ONLINE Brenda Stutsky RN, PhD June 22, 2010.
“Digital technologies are for education as iron and steel girders, reinforced concrete, plate glass, elevators, central heating and air conditioning.
Strategies to Increase Connectedness in Online Mathematics Courses Sonia Ford Midland College Midland, Texas AMATYC 2013 S001.
Barry Spencer A case study in transforming Teaching & Learning A case study in transforming Teaching & Learning Barry Spencer.
Barry Spencer eLearning Barry Spencer eLearning Development Coordinator Bromley College.
Agenda 1.Explore challenges of transitions 2.Teaching Presence 3.COI Model 4.Presence Rubric 5.Development of examples of strategies 6.New strategies.
Facilitating Online Discussions Jason D. Baker. Topics Discussion Value Discussion Tools Discussion Tips.
Emotion, Learning and the Online Learning Environment M. Cleveland-Innes Zehra Akyol.
Community of Inquiry Framework: Validation & Instrument Development
Barry Spencer A Transformation Case Study Barry Spencer.
Investigating Relationships among Elements of Interaction, Presence, and Student Learning in a Graduate Online Course Lydia Kyei-Blankson, Department of.
Student (and other) Course Evaluations Response Rates, Relevance and Results Kathleen Norris Plymouth State University, NH.
State University of New York A model for online learning in the SUNY Learning Network NLII Annual Meeting – January Online Learning Environments:
Instructional Design & Technology Cooperative Learning Effects in Online Instruction Beth Allred Oyarzun.
Jingzi Huang, Ph.D School of Teacher Education, CEBS UNC 2013 Fall GTA Conference Presentation.
Critical Thinking, Cognitive Presence, and Computer Conferencing Norm Friesen May 6, 2006.
Blended by Design: Designing and Developing a Blended Course Jennifer Strickland, PhD,
The Power of Online Learning: Creating & Nurturing an Effective Online Learning Community Fred Rovai.
Instructional Design Project - Presentation EME 620 Spring 2015 Benson Callier Rotunda Wilcox.
Designing an Effective Online Developmental Literacy Course David Caverly, Ph.D., Texas State University National Association for Developmental Education.
COMMUNICATION STRATEGIES IN ONLINE ENVIRONMENTS. WELCOME o Facilitator name Position at university Contact info.
College Reading and Learning Association Conference Richmond, VA 10/29/09.
FACT OVERVIEW. 22 Inquiry Focus and Number /Year Program Level Decision  CONTEXT FOR TEACHING Class, School, District, and Community Conversation Guides.
Asynchronous Discussions and Assessment in Online Learning Vonderwell, S., Liang, X., & Alderman, K. (2007). Asynchronous Discussions and Assessment in.
Building Social Presence in Online Education Through Course Design and Course Management: Continuing the Conversation Kia J. Bentley, Ph.D., LCSW Kia J.
Valuing evaluation: A Case Study of Professional Development to Support Academic Engagement in Online Evaluation Processes and Outcomes Dr. Diana Quinn.
Assessment of Learning Prepared By: Rhys Andrews Main Credit: Fenwick, T and Parsons, J. The Art of Evaluation.
Question 1 Why did a majority of students perceive the innovative web-enhanced Japanese language courses favorably and participate in additional online.
Blended Learning: The Future for UK Coach Education Post 2012 John Erskine.
Building Trust & Effective Communication Alisa Cooper, EdD Faculty, Assistant Chair/eCourses Coordinator English Department Glendale.
INTRODUCTION TO BLENDED LEARNING Bill Wisser, Ph.D. Simmons College 24 April 2012.
State University of New York An Emerging Model for Online Learning MERLOT International Conference – August A Systemic Approach to Online Learning.
A study of social presence in blended social work education Professor Walter LaMendola, PhD University of Denver.
Creating communities of inquiry Professor Jane Mills James Cook University.
ABSTRACT In this study, structural equation modeling is applied to examine the determinants of students’ satisfaction and their perceived learning outcomes.
ET4 Online Symposium, 2013 Using Text Analytics to Enhance Data-Driven Decision Making Liz Wallace Director, Institutional Research Melissa Layne, Ed.D.
ISECON (San Antonio, TX) November 1, Student Perceptions of Online Learning: A Comparison of Two Different Populations Kitty Daniels and Susan Feather.
Mobile Learning and the Online Community of Inquiry M. Cleveland-Innes M. Ally source:
Learning Communities and Their Effect on Deep and Surface Approaches to Learning By Patti Dyjur.
 Building Student Motivation to Learn: Defining Student Marketability to Potential Employers John Breskey, Ph.D. CSU Fullerton 16 th Annual Teaching Symposium.
Taeho Yu, Ph.D. Ana R. Abad-Jorge, Ed.D., M.S., RDN Kevin Lucey, M.M. Examining the Relationships Between Level of Students’ Perceived Presence and Academic.
Teaching in Blended Learning Environments: Creating and Sustaining Communities of Inquiry Dr. Norm Vaughan Dr. Marti Cleveland-Innes Dr. Randy Garrison.
Assessment Online. Student Assessment Design learner-centered assessment that include self-reflection Design grading rubrics to assess discussions, assignments,
CIDER 2015 Teaching Presence and Leadership D. Randy Garrison, Marti Cleveland-Innes, Norm Vaughan.
Improving Courses Across an Online Program: A Design-Based Approach Leonard Bogle, Scott Day, Daniel Matthews & Karen Swan University of Illinois Springfield.
Experiencing contiguous teaching and the student impact: Describing the blended teacher as bricoleur. M. Cleveland-Innes, Ph.D.
Information Retention in e-Learning De Leon Kimberly Obonyo Carolyne Penn John Yang Xiaoyan.
Development of the Construct & Questionnaire Randy Garrison & Zehra Akyol April
Social Presence Cognitive Presence Teaching Presence Presenting oneself as a “real person” Providing structure and support Extended discourse for sense.
Assessing Student Learning Using the Blackboard Discussion Board Assessment Workshop York College CUNY April 7, 2010 Wenying Huang-Stolte, Ph.D. William.
What Is This Intentional Learning Thing?
Professor Emeritus, University of Calgary
Joyce Bahhouth Bladen Community College
Social Presence within Two Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs)
Presented by Marie Lippens
Designing for Engagement
Technology to Promote Presence Interactive Strategies
EDU 695Competitive Success/snaptutorial.com
EDU 695 Education for Service-- snaptutorial.com
EDU 695 Teaching Effectively-- snaptutorial.com
Research topic Investigating how the use of visual models can enhance teaching of common fractions for conceptual understanding to grade 8 learners.
Office of Online Education: Tips for Effective Online Teaching
Creating a Community of Inquiry
Online Learning Communities: A Vision of the Future of Vanderbilt
Presentation transcript:

Zehra Akyol & Randy Garrison

Theoretical Background Research Question Methodology Results Discussion Conclusion

Community of Inquiry Framework Cognitive Presence – Practical Inquiry Model Deep and surface learning approaches and outcomes.

Social Presence The ability of participants to identify with the community (e.g., course of study), communicate purposefully in a trusting environment, and develop inter-personal relationships by way of projecting their individual personalities. Cognitive Presence The extent to which learners are able to construct and confirm meaning through sustained reflection and discourse in a critical community of inquiry. Teaching Presence The design, facilitation and direction of cognitive and social processes for the purpose of realizing personally meaningful and educationally worthwhile learning outcomes.

The Practical Inquiry Model includes four phases in describing cognitive presence in an educational context generally and online learning specifically (Garrison & Anderson, 2003). Triggering event Exploration Integration Resolution

Schrire (2004) found that the PI Model to be the most relevant to the analysis of the cognitive dimension and represents a clear picture of the knowledge-building processes occurring in online discussion (p. 491).

Marton and Saljo (1976) studied the strategies students used to approach learning and associated these findings with the qualitative differences in learning outcomes. The researchers found two levels of student information processing which they labeled as deep and surface. When students approach learning in a deep manner, learning outcomes were qualitatively enhanced; that is, the quality of outcomes were of a higher order. What is learned (the outcome or the result) and how it is learned (the act or process) are two inseparable aspects of learning (Marton, 1988)

Do online and blended collaborative communities of inquiry create cognitive presence that supports higher-order learning processes and outcomes? Is cognitive presence associated with perceived learning outcomes and grades, Are there differences between online and blended design approaches in terms of the strength of cognitive presence and perceived learning outcomes and grades?

CONTEXT Two courses on the same topic Online course -16 students Blended Course – 12 students Both courses designed to develop a community of inquiry Nine weeks of discussions Peer reviewed article critique Course redesign prototype project

Learning Processes Transcript Analysis of Online Discussions Interviews with Students and course instructor Learning Outcomes Self report of learning Perceived Cognitive Presence (CoI Survey) Final Grades

****Exploration (p=.004) and integration (p=.004) phases were found significantly different between courses

the cognitive presence was probably the best part, because the way the course was structured and designed, I felt like I was actually constructing my knowledge of blended learning as I was going through the course. (One students comment) Students comments about cognitive presence noted the importance of resources and learning activities in order to develop deep approaches to learning in both courses. if you do not have the activities that are directed to push students intentionally through four phases of inquiry model, learning does not happen. (Course Instructor)

Perceived Cognitive Presence Perceived Learning Satisfaction Online Course Blended Course Significancep=.209p=.154 p=.207

NMean Online course Blended Course Students indicated that they could learn in the course during the interviews. Students final grades

Online CourseBlended Course Perceived Learning Satisfaction Perceived Learning Satisfaction Cognitive Presence.67 p= p= p= p=.024

Why the resolution phase has the least activity in both learning environments? Why integration phase is significantly higher in the blended course? Are the processes described by the PI Model associated with actual higher-order learning outcomes and proxy measures such as perceived learning?

There is a strong relationship between collaborative constructivism and higher-order learning outcomes. Course Design basing on CoI approach was successful in both course leading to high levels of cognitive presence, perceived learning and learning outcomes. The blended format creates better conditions for critical inquiry and increases the perceptions of presences, satisfaction and learning.