Online vs. face-to-face discussion in a Web-based research methods course for postgraduate nursing students: a quasi-experimental study.

BACKGROUND Web-based technologies are increasingly being used to create modes of online learning for nurses but their effect has not been assessed in nurse education. OBJECTIVES Assess whether participation in face-to-face discussion seminars or online asynchronous discussion groups had different effects on educational attainment in a web-based course. DESIGN Non-randomised or quasi-experimental design with two groups-students choosing to have face-to-face discussion seminars and students choosing to have online discussions. SETTING The Core Methods module of a postgraduate research methods course. PARTICIPANTS All 114 students participating in the first 2 yr during which the course teaching material was delivered online. OUTCOME Assignment mark for Core Methods course module. METHODS Background details of the students, their choices of modules and assignment marks were collected as part of the routine course administration. Students' online activities were identified using the student tracking facility within WebCT. Regression models were fitted to explore the association between available explanatory variables and assignment mark. RESULTS Students choosing online discussions had a higher Core Methods assignment mark (mean 60.8/100) than students choosing face-to-face discussions (54.4); the difference was statistically significant (t=3.13, df=102, p=0.002), although this ignores confounding variables. Among online discussion students, assignment mark was significantly correlated with the numbers of discussion messages read (Kendall's tau(b)=0.22, p=0.050) and posted (Kendall's tau(b)=0.27, p=0.017); among face-to-face discussion students, it was significantly associated with the number of non-discussion hits in WebCT (Kendall's tau(b)=0.19, p=0.036). In regression analysis, choice of discussion method, whether an M.Phil./Ph.D. student, number of non-discussion hits in WebCT, number of online discussion messages read and number posted were associated with assignment mark at the 5% level of significance when taken singly; in combination, only whether an M.Phil./Ph.D. student (p=0.024) and number of non-discussion hits (p=0.045) retained significance. CONCLUSIONS This study demonstrates that a research methods course can be delivered to postgraduate healthcare students at least as successfully by an entirely online method in which students participate in online discussion as by a blended method in which students accessing web-based teaching material attend face-to-face seminar discussions. Increased online activity was associated with higher assignment marks. The study highlights new opportunities for educational research that arise from the use of virtual learning environments that routinely record the activities of learners and tutors.

[1]  Elizabeth Murphy,et al.  Recognising and promoting collaboration in an online asynchronous discussion , 2004, Br. J. Educ. Technol..

[2]  Rosemary J. Redfield,et al.  Does the medium change the message? The impact of a web-based genetics course on university students' perspectives on learning and teaching , 2002, Comput. Educ..

[3]  M. Warschauer Electronic literacies: language culture & power in online education , 1998 .

[4]  Clive Whitehead,et al.  Traditional face‐to‐face and web‐based tutorials: a study of university students' perspectives on the roles of tutorial participants , 2004 .

[5]  Thomas A. Keenan Computers and education , 1964, CACM.

[6]  Anne Jelfs,et al.  Virtual seminars and their impact on the rôle of the teaching staff , 2002, Comput. Educ..

[7]  J. Morris,et al.  Development and implementation of the MTutor on-line tutorial system for diploma level research students. , 2000, Nurse education today.

[8]  Scott D. Johnson,et al.  Comparative analysis of learner satisfaction and learning outcomes in online and face-to-face learning environments , 2000 .

[9]  Charles B. Hodges Designing to Motivate: Motivational Techniques to Incorporate in E-Learning Experiences , 2004 .

[10]  Kathleen P. King,et al.  Educators Revitalize the Classroom “Bulletin Board” , 2001 .

[11]  S. Timmons,et al.  An educational panopticon? New technology, nurse education and surveillance. , 2003, Nurse education today.

[12]  P. Winne,et al.  Effectiveness of computer assisted instruction in nursing education : an integrative review , 1984 .

[13]  Robert S. Weisskirch,et al.  Virtual Discussion: Understanding College Students' Electronic Bulletin Board Use , 2003 .

[14]  Will Gibson,et al.  Topicality and the structure of interactive talk in face‐to‐face seminar discussions: implications for research in distributed learning media , 2006 .

[15]  P. Jeffries,et al.  TECHNOLOGY ‐ BASED vs. Traditional Instruction: A Comparison of Two Methods for TEACHING the Skill of Performing a 12‐Lead ECG , 2003, Nursing education perspectives.

[16]  Dennis W. Sunal,et al.  Research-supported best practices for developing online learning , 2003 .

[17]  S. Kask,et al.  University Students' Perceptions of Cooperative Learning: Implications for Administrators and Instructors , 2001 .

[18]  Donald E. Mowrer A content analysis of student/instructor communication via computer conferencing , 1996 .

[19]  Jerry Andriessen,et al.  Learning through synchronous electronic discussion , 2000, Comput. Educ..

[20]  K. Trigwell,et al.  Relations between teachers' approaches to teaching and students' approaches to learning , 1999 .

[21]  R. Ocker,et al.  Collaborative Learning Environments: Exploring Student Attitudes and Satisfaction in Face-to-Face and Asynchronous Computer Conferencing Settings , 2001 .

[22]  Patricia Comeaux Communication and Collaboration in the Online Classroom: Examples and Applications. , 2002 .

[23]  Sally Phillips,et al.  Interactivity in online and face-to-face sections of a graduate nursing course , 2001 .

[24]  K. Arrow Higher education as a filter , 1973 .

[25]  Kerry Shephard,et al.  Evaluating the use of streaming video to support student learning in a first-year life sciences course for student nurses. , 2003, Nurse education today.