2015
DOI: 10.14742/ajet.1869
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Blending for student engagement: Lessons learned for MOOCs and beyond

Abstract: The purpose of this ongoing, three-year action research study is to explore the digital challenges of student engagement in higher education within the experimental platform of blended learning. Research questions examine the role of digital innovation in supporting diverse learners, as well as building meaningful connections with technology for undergraduate teacher education students. Results from qualitative data collected through instructor journals and field notes and student mid-term and exit surveys dur… Show more

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Cited by 53 publications
(51 citation statements)
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“…This challenge of decreasing tertiary online retention rates is also prevalent in Australia (Edwards & McMilla, 2015) and has reportedly cost Australian universities more than $1.4 billion or an average of $36 million per institution (Hare, 2010). This exemplifies not only the need in changing pedagogy and approach in such a context, but highlights the benefits of the blended and flexible approaches on learning, which have proven to be more successful than purely online course offerings (McCarthy, 2010;Montgomery et al, 2015;Oblender, 2002). University students expect flexible, innovative and engaging learning experiences with technologies that they commonly use or will be expected to use in today's professional, academic and social environments (Spiliotopoulos, 2011).…”
Section: Blended Learningmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…This challenge of decreasing tertiary online retention rates is also prevalent in Australia (Edwards & McMilla, 2015) and has reportedly cost Australian universities more than $1.4 billion or an average of $36 million per institution (Hare, 2010). This exemplifies not only the need in changing pedagogy and approach in such a context, but highlights the benefits of the blended and flexible approaches on learning, which have proven to be more successful than purely online course offerings (McCarthy, 2010;Montgomery et al, 2015;Oblender, 2002). University students expect flexible, innovative and engaging learning experiences with technologies that they commonly use or will be expected to use in today's professional, academic and social environments (Spiliotopoulos, 2011).…”
Section: Blended Learningmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Research in blended learning and results from this study suggest that both the face-to-face and online components need to be complementary and interdependent to be successful (Francis & Shannon, 2013;Montgomery et al, 2015). In such a context technology should be seamlessly integrated into the instructional design and teaching process (Torrisi-Steele & Drew, 2013;Turney, Robinson, Lee, & Soutar, 2009).…”
Section: Student Responses N = 88mentioning
confidence: 93%
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“…Furthermore, the five principles of effective teaching were found in MOOCs: student-faculty contact, student-student contact, active learning, prompt feedback and respect for students' diverse talents and ways of learning [14][15].…”
Section: Bmentioning
confidence: 99%