Taylor & Francis Online :: Educational use of social networking technology in higher ed... - 6 views
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They found that the students in cooperative learning classrooms perceived higher sense of community and reported greater motivation in achievement goals than those in non-cooperative learning classrooms.
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Jo Lynn Sedgwick on 28 Mar 12The classes I've had with the highest overall success rates had a fantastic group of students who were nearly all actively participating in lecture discussions each class meeting. These classes had this same sense of community being mentioned here.
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that sense of classroom community is an essential element of successful e-learning.
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I've experienced this myself through the online classes I've taken from the discussion boards utilitzed. At first I thought it was just one more thing to do, but quickly realized the valuable purpose was to bring everyone together & create that sense of community even though we weren't in a classroom together.
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With this in mind, hybrid communities mixing online interaction with face-to-face interaction may be ideal.
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When teaching a fully onlilne course, I've thought about having students submit a face-shot of themselves so that while they are participating in the group discussions they will have a visual of the person they're talking to in their mind. However, my question is - does this break any of the privacy issues? Is this not a good idea? I see the benefits, I can see a few draw backs, but somehow want to create more of a sense of community with the fully online course. Any suggestions?
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