“…Thus, as an increasing number of minority students continue to enroll in online education (Ashong & Commander, 2012;Petersen, 2015), it is imperative that researchers examine the extent to which instructional strategies such as collaborative learning-well documented in the research literature as effective for the general online student population-works effectively for culturally diverse students. This is particularly important because several studies have reported that instructors of online courses often fail to recognize and address the cultural diversity of their learners in the online learning environments (e.g., Adeoye & Wentling, 2007;Gunawardena, Layne, & Frechette, 2012;Mushtaha & Troyer, 2007;Rogers, Graham & Mayes, 2007), and results from some studies seem to suggest that students from diverse cultural backgrounds exhibit poor leadership skills in leading online discussion (Okwumabua, Walker, Hu, & Watson, 2011), as well as experience challenges in participating online collaborative learning activities (Du & Anderson, 2003). The purpose of this study, therefore, was to investigate the perceptions of culturally diverse graduate students about online collaborative learning activities.…”