Instructor’s Use of Social Presence, Teaching Presence, and Attitudinal Dissonance: A Case Study of an Attitudinal Change MOOC
暂无分享,去创建一个
William R. Watson | Sunnie Lee Watson | Jennifer C. Richardson | Jamie Loizzo | W. Watson | S. Watson | J. Loizzo
[1] L. Festinger. A Theory of Social Comparison Processes , 1954 .
[2] Carol Hostetter,et al. Community matters: Social presence and learning outcomes , 2013 .
[3] C. Osvaldo Rodriguez,et al. MOOCs and the AI-Stanford Like Courses: Two Successful and Distinct Course Formats for Massive Open Online Courses. , 2012 .
[4] Nian-Shing Chen,et al. A model for social presence in online classrooms , 2012, Educational Technology Research and Development.
[5] B. Glaser. The Constant Comparative Method of Qualitative Analysis , 1965 .
[6] Marc Clarà,et al. Learning online: massive open online courses (MOOCs), connectivism, and cultural psychology , 2013 .
[7] Leslie J. Briggs,et al. Principles of Instructional Design , 1974 .
[8] Derek D. Rucker,et al. Unpacking attitude certainty: attitude clarity and attitude correctness. , 2007, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[9] Michael Simonson,et al. Designing instruction for attitudinal outcomes , 1979 .
[10] Kai J. Jonas,et al. Attitude change and social influence on the net , 2009 .
[11] D. Garrison,et al. Exploring causal relationships among teaching, cognitive and social presence: Student perceptions of the community of inquiry framework , 2010, Internet High. Educ..
[12] James T. Flynn,et al. Moocs: Disruptive Innovation and the Future of Higher Education , 2013 .
[13] Stephen Griffin,et al. Attitude change. , 2001, Nursing standard (Royal College of Nursing (Great Britain) : 1987).
[14] P. Shea,et al. A study of teaching presence and student sense of learning community in fully online and web-enhanced college courses , 2006, Internet High. Educ..
[15] Katelyn Y. A. McKenna,et al. Oxford Handbook of Internet Psychology , 2007 .
[16] David B. Mykota,et al. Learner Characteristics as Predictors of Online Social Presence , 2007 .
[17] Chih-Hsiung Tu,et al. The Measurement of Social Presence in an Online Learning Environment , 2002 .
[18] Carol Hostetter,et al. Measuring up Online: The Relationship between Social Presence and Student Learning Satisfaction. , 2006 .
[19] Heather Kanuka,et al. Interaction and the online distance classroom: Do instructional methods effect the quality of interaction? , 2011, J. Comput. High. Educ..
[20] Karen Swan,et al. Linking online course design and implementation to learning outcomes: A design experiment , 2012, Internet High. Educ..
[21] Jennifer C. Richardson,et al. Conceptualizing and Investigating Instructor Presence in Online Learning Environments. , 2015 .
[22] Jennifer C. Richardson,et al. A Constructivist Approach to Online Learning: The Community of Inquiry Framework , 2009 .
[23] Spencer Benson,et al. Learning with Invisible Others: Perceptions of Online Presence and their Relationship to Cognitive and Affective Learning , 2005, J. Educ. Technol. Soc..
[24] Terry Ann Morris. Exploring Community College Student Perceptions of Online Learning. , 2010 .
[25] M. R. Leippe,et al. The Psychology of Attitude Change and Social Influence , 1991 .
[26] J. B. Arbaugh,et al. Sage, guide, both, or even more? An examination of instructor activity in online MBA courses , 2010, Comput. Educ..
[27] John W. Creswell,et al. A Concise Introduction to Mixed Methods Research , 2014 .
[28] Zehra Akyol. Examining teaching presence, social presence, cognitive presence, satisfaction and learning in online and blended course contexts , 2009 .
[29] Terry Anderson,et al. E-Learning in the 21st Century: A Community of Inquiry Framework for Research and Practice , 2016 .
[30] Michael Simonson,et al. Instructional technology and attitude change , 1995 .
[31] Shirley Williams,et al. MOOCs: A systematic study of the published literature 2008-2012 , 2013 .
[32] P. S. Visser,et al. Attitudes in the social context: the impact of social network composition on individual-level attitude strength. , 2004, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[33] C. Sinclair,et al. Teacher Experiences and Academic Identity: The Missing Components of MOOC Pedagogy , 2014 .
[34] Arthur Bangert,et al. The influence of social presence and teaching presence on the quality of online critical inquiry , 2008, J. Comput. High. Educ..
[35] D. Garrison,et al. Critical thinking, cognitive presence, and computer conferencing in distance education , 2001 .
[36] Lynette Nagel,et al. Supersizing e-learning: What a CoI survey reveals about teaching presence in a large online class , 2010, Internet High. Educ..
[37] Laura M. Harrison,et al. MOOCs and Democratic Education. , 2013 .
[38] Karen Swan,et al. Validating a Measurement Tool of Presen ce in Online Communities of Inquiry , 2008 .
[39] D. R. Garrison,et al. Article Review - Social Presence within the Community of Inquiry Framework , 2012 .
[40] Frank McCluskey,et al. Student Perceptions of the Relationship between Indicators of Teaching Presence and Success in Online Courses , 2010 .
[41] William R. Watson,et al. Learning outcomes of a MOOC designed for attitudinal change: A case study of an Animal Behavior and Welfare MOOC , 2016, Comput. Educ..
[42] C. Gunawardena. Social Presence Theory and Implications for Interaction and Collaborative Learning in Computer Conferences , 1995 .
[43] D. Randy Garrison,et al. Critical Inquiry in a Text-Based Environment: Computer Conferencing in Higher Education , 1999, Internet High. Educ..