A study of teaching presence and student sense of learning community in fully online and web-enhanced college courses
Published | August 2006 |
Journal | The Internet and Higher Education Volume 9, Issue 3, Pages 175--190 |
Country | United States, North America |
ABSTRACT
This paper focuses on two components of a model for online teaching and learning—“teaching presence” and “community”. It is suggested that previous research points to the critical role that community plays in academic success and persistence in higher education. Through a review of recent literature it is proposed that teaching presence–viewed as the core roles of the online instructor–is a promising mechanism for developing learning community in online environments. This investigation presents a multi-institutional study of 1067 students across 32 different colleges that further substantiates this claim. An instrument to assess instructor teaching presence (“The Teaching Presence Scale”) is presented and validated. Factor and regression analysis indicate a significant link between students' sense of learning community and effective instructional design and “directed facilitation” on the part of course instructors, and highlights interesting differences between online and classroom environments. Alternative hypotheses regarding student demographics associated with variables such as age (the “net generation” effect) and gender are also examined. Despite recent assertions that younger students are or soon will be too sophisticated to “feel at home” in largely text-based asynchronous learning environments, no significant effects were found by demographic differences examined. Recommendations for online course design, pedagogy, and future research are included.CoI focus | Teaching presence |
Population | Undergraduate |
Study design | Survey |
Data analysis | Factor analysis |
Instrument | The Teaching Presence Scale |
Contribution | Empirical |
Sample size | 1067 |
Published at | New York |
Language | English |
Refereed | Yes |
DOI | 10.1016/j.iheduc.2006.06.005 |
Export | BibTex · EndNote · Tagged XML · Google Scholar |
Viewed by 0 distinct readers
COMMUNITY NOTES
The evaluations below represent the judgements of our readers and do not necessarily reflect the opinions of the CoI editors.
POST A COMMENT
SIMILAR RECORDS
Online instructional effort measured through the lens of teaching presence in the community of inquiry framework: A re-examination of measures and approach
Shea, Peter; Hayes, Suzanne; Vickers, Jason
With more than 4 million students enrolled in online courses in the US alone (Allen & Seaman, 2010), it is now time to inquire into the nature of instructional effort in online environments. Reflecting the community of ...
Match: shea, peter; community; teaching presence; higher education; united states
A study of students' sense of learning community in online environments
Shea, Peter
This paper looks first at some of the often unspoken epistemological, philosophical, and theoretical assumptions that are foundational to student-centered, interactive online pedagogical models. It is argued that these ...
Match: shea, peter; community; teaching presence; united states
A Follow-up Investigation of Teaching Presence in the SUNY Learning Network
Shea, Peter J.; Pickett, Alexandra M.; Pelz, William E.
This paper is a follow-up study to a preliminary investigation of teaching presence in the State University of New York Learning Network (SLN). In the present studywe review ongoing issues of pedagogy and faculty ...
Match: community; teaching presence; online learning; united states
Confirmatory Factor Analysis on the Sub-Construct of Teaching Presence’s in the Community of Inquiry
Nasir, M. Khalid M.; Surat, Shahlan; Maat, Siti Mistima; Karim, Aidah Abd; Daud, Md. Yusoff
This study aims to re-examine the reliability and validity of three sub-constructs in measuring the level of teaching presence from one of the essential elements in the Community of Inquiry model. The measurement ...
Match: community; teaching presence; online learning
Online Classroom or Community-in-the-Making? Instructor Conceptualizations and Teaching Presence in International Online Contexts
Morgan, Tannis
The community of inquiry framework (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000 ) has been an important contribution to the online distance education field and has been useful in providing researchers with the construct of ...
Match: community; teaching presence; online learning
Exploring Community College Student Perceptions of Online Learning
Morris, Terry Ann
The purpose of this qualitative study was to explore community college student perceptions of online learning within the theoretical construct of the Community of Inquiry (CoI) model, which describes the manner in which ...
Match: community; teaching presence; online learning; united states
Perceptions within a Virtual Community of Practice: A Q-Method Study
Rodriguez, Gregory
Incorporating people's values and beliefs into virtual communities is an important component of sustainable communities of practice. The purpose of this study is to better understand the beliefs and perspectives of ...
Match: community; factor analysis; united states
Redesigning a Foreign Language Class Based on the Community of Inquiry Model: Students' Learning Success and Satisfaction with an Online Course
Song, Jayoung
The global outbreak of COVID-19 substantially changed foreign language classrooms, from the design to the implementation of the lessons. Most of the L2 classes, originally designed for face-to-face (F2F) learning, ...
Match: community; teaching presence; online learning; united states
New exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis insights into the community of inquiry survey
Kozan, Kadir; Richardson, Jennifer C.
This study has the aim of investigating the factor structure of an adapted version of the Community of Inquiry survey developed by Arbaugh et al. (2008). For this purpose, both exploratory and confirmatory analyses were ...
Match: community; teaching presence; factor analysis; united states
Does "teaching presence" exist in online MBA courses?
Arbaugh, J. B.; Hwang, Alvin
This paper assesses the construct validity of the dimensions of teaching presence, one of three types of presence articulated in Garrison, Anderson, and Archer's [Garrison, D.R., Anderson, T., and Archer, W. (2000). ...
Match: teaching presence; online learning; united states