Using Interactive Online Pedagogical Approaches to Promote Student Engagement
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- In what ways do two online instructors use interactive pedagogical approaches to engage their student cohorts with learning challenging course content?
- What are these online students’ perceptions of the impact of these approaches on their learning and engagement?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Instructor Presence
2.2. Use of Multimedia
3. Theoretical Framework
4. Methods
4.1. Interview Data
4.2. eVALUate Data
4.3. Data Analysis
5. Results
5.1. Case Study 1: Teaching Primary Mathematics
5.1.1. Engaging with Content through Activities
“There were certain things that she would have us maybe experiment with the children that we had, so my kids were my guinea pigs. You know, ‘Can you solve this? What do you think about this?’ kind of thing. So, it was, on a personal level, it was simple enough that I could do it on a week to week, I could use my kids as well in it. So, I could learn about how they saw it and how I understood it kind of a thing.”(Jasmine)
“I really enjoyed the questions [and] weekly activities that the lecturer gave us…She really encouraged the whole thinking out of the square, and not just doing formal algorithms, explaining how you would solve a problem. I really enjoyed that because it just proves that there’s not a right way to do a maths problem…and reading how the other people solve their problems was really an eye-opener. Every week I jumped on [to the discussion board] to see what other people had done, or how they’d solved the problem to compare it to how I had.”(Patricia)
“I think I really liked the fact that it was not just all the theory stuff, you know, knowing harder teachings, but also she had us do some Maths…So, I really liked that. Just that, I don’t know, to me it was like, a bit of fun.”(Kayla)
“I was really, really happy with the way it was set out in terms of, it wasn’t all reading nor all lectures, and only very, very short lectures, and then there were videos and quizzes, and resources, and it was a lot of different things, which kept it interesting.”(Lisa)
5.1.2. Engaging with Content through Multimedia
“I like the fact that every week, there was an introductory video which was current…it made you feel like you were having a conversation with her, and she was talking about things that had actually happened the week before.”(Kayla)
“I made sure those videos were the first things I watched every week before I did the rest of the content. I thought they were a really good overview, but I think, all over, it could’ve been a bit more focussed on…Like, maybe just even a couple of minutes explaining how to approach the maths before we learn how to teach it, if that makes sense…But, yes, I did watch those videos.”(Lisa)
“I thought they were good…I like the idea of having an instruction video because it set the tone for the week. Especially…some of the content was incredibly new for me. The introduction video was at least a way to comprehend the whole week’s work.”(Marissa)
“The videos were good for me because when it comes to math…it was not my strength, it really wasn’t my strength growing up…I was like, ‘Oh my God. This was something I learned about 100 years ago or something,’…So, the videos really helped. I could go back and I could be like, ‘Oh, is that how they do that?’…So, all these physical equipment that they use, it was good to see what it looks like and how they can manipulate them and things like that, so the videos were the best for me.”(Jasmine)
“I know sometimes I’ve got to interpret words or activities in my own way. But if she demonstrated it, then you know exactly what she was talking about.”(Oscar)
5.1.3. Engaging with Content through Discussions
“I had completely forgot how to do fractions, for example. And so, it was really good to read other people’s posts, and I was like ‘Oh right! That’s how you do it. I forgot that rule.’”(Harry)
“I think that it is important to have that discussion board because sometimes when you have absolutely no idea what that particular topic was about, you can go and you can see what someone else has written and be like, ‘Oh yeah. That makes sense.’”(Jasmine)
“I like how the lecturer encouraged us to think outside the square. There’s no right way or wrong way to do things, as such. So, I posted weekly with explanations and trying to get the way that I do maths across to the other students because I think that I do it a little bit differently to other people.”(Patricia)
“Maths does have a right and wrong answer, even though we’re being taught that there’s a number of ways to get to answers… We felt a bit stupid. We didn’t want to make mistakes because there were people there that were quite capable… Our contributions were sort of making us… feel a bit inadequate.”(Marissa)
5.1.4. Summary of Results for Case Study 1
5.2. Case Study 2: Introduction to Chinese
“I think that having a range of different resources is really important for online and I like things being kind of bite-sized so that you don’t necessarily have to sit down and watch a 50 min lecture but making things a bit more modular is really beneficial in the online space.”(Natalia)
“There’s a lot of content online and I know some students don’t really use it, that extra content, you know, and I’m probably specifically talking about Chinese, you know, Lecturer puts up videos and all this extra little stuff there for us.”(Olivia)
“The unit [subject] helps me understand the basics of the Chinese Language and build a proper foundation. The interactive questions in the modules which give me a chance to test my learning.”(Student, eVALUate comment)
5.2.1. Engaging with Content through Digital Tools
5.2.2. Engaging with Content through Multimedia
“When you go into this space on the computer, online, it’s very immersive…it’s virtual technology…you can imagine, and you can see the streets and all the signs and there’s the markets. And there’s all these little experiences that you wouldn’t have been able to have any other way. There are those little things that you get to learn about the culture from a—yeah, in a native way, not so much a tourist, you know, and also within that island you also can increase your language skills by engaging in conversations.”(Olivia)
“I think as a beginner, vocabulary is one of the most important things. Being able to click on objects and retrieve the vocab/further info was something I found quite useful, which complemented my more ‘traditional’ approach to learning.”(Darren)
“It helped reinforce what I’d already learned, and it taught me new characters as well.”(Kathleen)
5.2.3. Engaging with Content through Instructor Interaction
“The second you put all these discussion boards and all the rest of it open for everyone to see, you’re kind of like—which is weird because in real life, we don’t have a problem often conversing with one another, but then the second it’s online, it’s almost like there’s that kind of stigma of the oversight of the lecturer, I can’t say what I want to be seen and it’s there forever and things like that. I think it’s a difficult problem.”(Andre)
“Sometimes I think they’re not people’s real opinions, they’re what they want people to think they think. I think there’s all a falseness that goes on in discussion boards or what the lecturer wants to hear. There’s a lot of conformity around.”(Olivia)
“For some reason I couldn’t attend that first lecture, but—and I’ve never received an email from a lecturer before that said ‘I was expecting to see you today. Are you coming tomorrow?’”(Olivia)
“I guess for me, the kind of accessibility to interacting with lecturers, I think, is something I value in lecturers, approachable, personable…even if it’s outside of consultation times or whatever—generally being accommodating and trying to work with you to get whatever outcome you’re working towards is something I’ve personally really valued.”(Andre)
5.2.4. Summary of Results for Case Study 2
6. Discussion
6.1. Instructors’ Use of Interactive Strategies
6.2. Instructor–Content
6.3. Learner–Content
6.4. Learner–Instructor
7. Conclusions and Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Muir, T.; Wang, I.; Trimble, A.; Mainsbridge, C.; Douglas, T. Using Interactive Online Pedagogical Approaches to Promote Student Engagement. Educ. Sci. 2022, 12, 415. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12060415
Muir T, Wang I, Trimble A, Mainsbridge C, Douglas T. Using Interactive Online Pedagogical Approaches to Promote Student Engagement. Education Sciences. 2022; 12(6):415. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12060415
Chicago/Turabian StyleMuir, Tracey, Isabel Wang, Allison Trimble, Casey Mainsbridge, and Tracy Douglas. 2022. "Using Interactive Online Pedagogical Approaches to Promote Student Engagement" Education Sciences 12, no. 6: 415. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12060415
APA StyleMuir, T., Wang, I., Trimble, A., Mainsbridge, C., & Douglas, T. (2022). Using Interactive Online Pedagogical Approaches to Promote Student Engagement. Education Sciences, 12(6), 415. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci12060415