Thursday, January 5, 2012

Community Building and Effective Online Communities

Online Learning Communities and Student Achievement

Online communities can improve student achievement if programs are structured in a manner in which there is a sense of shared purpose, good interaction between students and the instructor, along with mutual respect, trust, and support. If the learning community is initially established well, learning can be enhanced among students. Pallott and Pratt (2011) states if the instructor facilitates and creates a safelearning environment, students will be more successful at learning the content through collaborative activities that the instructor has designed and facilitated. The instructor must also have frequent and effective interaction with students to develop interpersonal relationships to enhance student satisfaction and achievement.

Students can transform from the typical passive learner to an active learner by their participation and reflective activities throughout the course. Activities that require student interaction and encourage a sharing of ideas promote a deeper level of thought. (Conrad & Donaldson, 2010) Students are more likely to be actively engage in the curriculum because they are able to discuss, question, and share findings with their colleagues. As the tasks become more challenging, students can find support within their online community. Students become more confident in their abilities, therefore creating a network of experts with different perspectives within the community. Students will become active knowledge generators who assume responsibility for constructing and managing their own learning experiences. (Conrad & Donaldson, 2010)  The result is a rich and successful learning community.
If the proper components are present and consistent throughout the course, students are more likely to succeed, have greater satisfaction, and learn. Students are less likely to become disengaged with the course and are more likely to ask for guidance which will in turn increase student satisfaction.

Essential Considerations for Online Community Building

In order to build a successful online community, there are essential elements that should be present. Pallott and Pratt(2011) explains that online community building need people, who are part of the community, a purpose for the online community, and the process in which students will connect. This includes:
1. Effective Planning
2. Assessing student needs at the beginning of the course
3. Involving administration, students, and instructors regularly in the process of online community building.
4. Proper design of the course.
5. Determine goals of the course, strategies that will be used to connect the online community, and assessment throughout the course.

Furthermore, the online community must be established in a way to develop trust so that learning occurs. This can be accomplished by building the relationship with students and instructors by the use of icebreakers, introductions, and clear expectations and goals.

How to Sustain Online Learning Communities

In order to sustain online learning communities, it is essential that administration and facilitators use continuous assessment and evaluation in order to address the needs of individual students that will participate in an online community now and in the future. Instructors need to be familiar with online technology, be involved, set the stage, and create an effective learning community. (Pallott & Pratt, 2011)
This can be achieved in the following ways:
1. Effective preplanning of the course
2. Constant assessment of student needs as students navigate through the course
3. Revision of strategies if needed
4. Communication between administration, students, and facilitators
5. Proper training
 Reflection
Online learning is quite different from teaching in a face to face environment. There are many strategies that can be used from the traditional method that would be effective in an online environment such making connections with students in order to increase engagement. I think that in any setting that it is important to establish rapport with students and create a community of learners. As a current classroom teacher, it is important not to fall in a trap of transferring a traditional course into an online course. In the future, I will continue to make connections with my students, but realize in the online classroom it is important to be able to "read between the words" to gather information because the visual cues will not be present. By constantly being familiar with new technologies, being "present", and structuring the course to meet the needs of all learners with varying experiences, I will be able to ensure that my students will be motivated and able to successfully interact and collaborate in the online learning environment and eventually engage in independent knowledge building. (Conrad & Donaldson, 2011)



Student engagement and active learning community at Riley's Farm in Oak Glen, CA 
Resources:

Boettcher, J., & Conrad, R. (2010). The online teaching survival guide: Simple and practical pedagogical tips. San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Conrad, R., & Donaldson, J. (2011). Engaging the online learner: Activities and resources for creative instruction (Updated ed.). San Francisco, CA: Jossey-Bass.

Palloff, R. & Pratt, K. (2011) Video: Online Learning Communities retrieved from Laureate Learning.

3 comments:

  1. As an essential consideration you listed assessing the students’ needs at the start of the course. What would you do as an instructor to accomplish this task?

    Education should be about building learners' skills to do useful things. What is important to learn is whatever helps learners do things that they want or need to do (Schank & Cleary, n.d). So, if we want to tailor the knowledge students require we need to find out what they already know. Then we can decide what knowledge will be useful for each student.

    Reference:

    Schank, R., & Cleary, C. (n.d). What a curriculum should contain. Retrieved from Engines For Education.
    Retrieved from http://www.engines4ed.org/hyperbook/nodes/NODE-72-pg.html

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  2. Chauna--

    Welcome to the course! Just wanted to let you know I will be following your blog. ~Beth M

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  3. I do think that communities are needed to nurture the online learning environment. I completed the courses with the assurance that I took something away with me once I was done. And having the support of the instructors and my classmates gave me that opportunity. Is there something that gives a sense that the component of trust is established present in the online community? I was just curious because I saw you mentioned that.

    Connie

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