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An Ecological Model of Learner Support for Tertiary Online Education . Wang Tong Beijing Foreign Studies University. Outline. Research background Research design & findings An ecological learner support model for tertiary online education Pilot results Future directions.
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An Ecological Model of Learner Support for Tertiary Online Education Wang Tong Beijing Foreign Studies University
Outline • Research background • Research design & findings • An ecological learner support model for tertiary online education • Pilot results • Future directions
1.1 Tensions in learner support system design • Two empirical studies (national survey 2004, institutional survey 2005) • High institutional expectations vs. low uptake of support provisions • Learner support as a specific component vs. as a quality to whole organisation (learner support vs. Learner Support)
1.2 Student retention • Retention is a key issue to distance/online education. • Key models of student retention
Some examples • Athabasca University • 75% non-completion rate • Korean National Open University • 90% dropout rate • Indonesian Open Learning University • 95% dropout rate • The Open University of the UK • non-completion rates between 25% and 50% • The Open University of Hong Kong • examination non-attendance about 30% • BeiwaiOnline • 35% non-completion rate
Bajtelsmit's model for dropout from distance education (1988)
1.3 Questions to answer • Why do students leave an elearning system? • What factors influence students’ uptake of support provisions? • “Who is the learner?” (Tait 2003) • “What is the realistic understanding of what it is the learners actually do?” (Goodyear, 1997)
2.1 Research design • Qualitative and quantitative • Approach: bottom-up perspective, longitudinal study (a full term) • A new tool designed: student diary which can track students’ learning activities at minute level • Two pilots and the main study • 2005-2007
2.2 Findings • Time use • Time management • Uptake of support provisions • Frustration and pleasure • Strategies in use
3) Typology of time use • “non-work-time”pattern • “work-time only” pattern • “mixed time” pattern
4) Time management • “could find much time for study” (M=2.9) (no statistical difference among groups) (low achievers did the best) • “could manage time well” (M=2.7) (statistical difference between high and average groups) (high achievers did the best)
Self-reported time management strategies • using bits of time for learning • using leisure time for learning • having a study plan • exercising self-control
Self-reported problems in time management • conflict with work • personal state • failure in implementing study plan • conflict with family • lack of metacognitive strategy • conflict with other learning commitments • low language competence level • poor self control • unexpected happening
5) Use of online provisions • Synchronous • The e-learners only utilised 39 minutes out of the 630-minute online provisions per week. • Asynchronous • The online forums received still worse student attention. Among the 42 forums provided by BeiwaiOnline, students only spent 18 minutes per week to browse them.
5) Patterns of provision utilisation • Students tend to use more offline provisions. • As Goodyear (1999, p5) vividly put, “no matter how breathtaking the multimedia or how pure the instructional design, computer-based learning resources will not be used (other than at the margins) unless (a) their use is mandatory, or (b) successful completion of an assessed task requires their use.” • More framing effects than enabling effects • Learners tend to study alone.
7) Self-reported affective & social strategies • Loneliness • It is positive. • It is a feeling to be avoided. • Loneliness • Not feeling lonely (103 references) • Feeling lonely (45 references)
2.3 Gap between learner ecologies & institutional expectations • Time use & management • e-learners invest a lot of time in English study • Gap between reality and design System approach vs. ecological approach in learner support design
2.3 Gap between learner ecologies & institutional expectations • Uptake of support provisions • Critical review of all sub-systems within an elearning framework • Online technologies frame and enable e-learners • Mobile technologies needed • UKOU • NKI • The India Gandhi National Open University
2.3 Gap between learner ecologies & institutional expectations • Strategy-based training • Both a goal and a process • A deep approach: should be embedded in curriculum design, resources development, assessment design, learner support.
Part 3 An ecological learner support model for tertiary online education
Key features of the model • learning-process-based • Learner-ecologies-driven • Interdependency analysis between framing and enabling effects • Multiple human roles • Core roles: administrator, administration staff, counselors, tutors • Supplementary roles: roles in other sub-systems • Four-layer loop for continuous review and improvement
Key features of the model • The model delivers identity (Thorpe), adaptability in scaffolding (Maclaughlin), and proactivity (Moore). • Learner-system interactive dynamism and system sensitivity to learner ecologies are the essence of the model.
Future directions • More research into learner ecologies • More research into learner-system interactions • More research from ecological perspective • More research into learner support as a quality to whole organisation
Summary • Research background • Research design & findings • An ecological learner support model for tertiary online education • Pilot results • Future directions