Developmental Educators’ Perspectives of Online Teaching and Learning Within a Community of Inquiry Framework

Date

2023-05

Authors

Shinn, Holly

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Abstract

This study explored the perceptions of sixty-five developmental education instructors who taught mathematics, reading/writing, English, learning frameworks, or corequisite online courses. Community of Inquiry was used as a conceptual framework to guide analyses. Nonparametric tests revealed statistically significant differences on course structure (teaching presence), comfort of engagement (social presence), and resolution (cognitive presence) between instructors prepared for online instruction and participants who transferred online due to COVID-19 (emergency remote). Statistically significant differences were also found between participants who taught asynchronous and synchronous instruction (mostly emergency remote) on comfort of engagement. Open coding results revealed participants who taught synchronous instruction endured more challenges than successes when trying to get students to engage in online discussions. Results implied effective online instruction may require educators to constantly change teaching practices to meet student needs. Also, preparedness for online teaching may influence online success. Recommendations for future research are discussed.

Description

Keywords

developmental education, online teaching, community of inquiry, emergency remote, online instruction, instructor perspectives, postsecondary education learning environments, asynchronous, synchronous, online communication methods

Citation

Shinn, H. (2023). Developmental educators’ perspectives of online teaching and learning within a community of inquiry framework (Unpublished dissertation). Texas State University, San Marcos, Texas.

Rights

Rights Holder

Rights License

Rights URI