Author/Authors :
Heather Kanuka، نويسنده , , Liam Rourke and Elaine Laflamme، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
In this case study, we examined the influence of five groups of communication
activities on the quality of students’ contributions to online discussion. The
activities were the nominal group technique, debate, invited expert, WebQuest
and reflective deliberation. Quality of discussion was operationalised as
cognitive presence
, a construct developed to investigate the role of critical
discourse in higher, distance education contexts. Using the quantitative
content analysis technique, the postings of 19 students in an undergraduate
university course were assigned to one of the four categories of cognitive
presence. Across the five activities, the proportion and number of contributions
categorised in the highest phases of cognitive presence was low (20.21%), but
was highest during the Webquest and debate activities. There are three
advantageous qualities of these two activities, we argue:
1. They were well structured.
2. They provided clearly defined roles and responsibilities for the students.
3. They provoked the students to explicitly confront others’ opinions.