Creating shared understanding through chats in a community of inquiry
Stein, David S. · Wanstreet, Constance E. · Glazer, Hilda R. · Engle, Cheryl L. · Harris, Ruth A. · Johnston, Susan M. · Simons, Mona R. · Trinko, Lynn A.
Published | 24 March 2007 |
Journal | The Internet and Higher Education Volume 10, Issue 2, Pages 103-115 |
Country | United States, North America |
ABSTRACT
This study investigated the process by which shared understanding develops in a chat learning space. It used a practical inquiry model to assess the development of cognitive presence. The study also explored how the pattern of conversation in synchronous discussion supports cognitive presence and how cognitive presence changes over time. Results show that there is a pattern among group members that involves reacquainting themselves through social presence and orienting themselves to the cognitive task through teaching presence. Individual meaning contributed by each member of the group through triggering events and exploratory statements is transformed as members see the text on the screen and respond to it through questioning and collective exploration. This group exploration enables the transition to shared understanding.Keywords | computer mediated communication · inquiry · group discussion · computer uses in education · group dynamics · educational technology · technology integration |
CoI focus | Cognitive presence |
Methodology | Quantitative |
Population | University |
Study design | Case study |
Data analysis | Transcript analysis |
Instrument | CoI transcript analysis |
Contribution | Conceptual |
Sample size | 31 students |
Study aim | "to examine the interactions of students in a chat learning space over time to determine whether the learning shifts from personal meaning to shared understanding" |
Finding | "interactions during a chat that result in shared understanding form a particular pattern. The pattern begins with the group members exhibiting social presence by reacquainting themselves and using teaching presence to orient themselves to the learning task. Social presence and teaching presence exhibited by the learners themselves supported cognitive presence." |
Published at | Ohio |
Language | English |
ISSN | 1096-7516 |
Refereed | Yes |
Rights | 2007 Elsevier Inc. |
DOI | 10.1016/j.iheduc.2007.02.002 |
URL | https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1096751607000206 |
Export | BibTex · EndNote · Tagged XML · Google Scholar |
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