I've decided it's time to get this blog moving again. It's hard to believe it has been four months since my last post. I've been very busy revising my online classes, they were sorely neglected while I was in grad school and so now I'm using what I learned in my classes and research to revise my courses so that they are better experiences for my students.
I also writing a couple of papers based on my research findings on improving student academic success in online courses. Should have done this sooner, but I have had a few motivational issues and have been recovering from the intense 3 1/2 years of graduate school and dissertation work. I'm thinking that this blog is a good way to get back in the writing groove. I've also neglected my Twitter account - my handle is @diagonaldee and I've decided I need to get active there as well.
I read recently that the dissertation is just the first step in research and I can see how that is the case. There are several questions that I didn't answer in my dissertation that I want to use the data that I have to see if I can find any answers - more on that later. I met my goal of completing my Ph.D. and am still feeling great about it! However, graduating in December, but not being able to get hooded until two weeks ago kind of made me feel that it wasn't really done yet. But I have the pictures and saw the streaming video http://graduate.ku.edu/doctoral-hooding-ceremony and had a great party after the hooding (even if our air conditioning failed that day) so yes, I'm done and now am ready to continue my education exploration - I love learning and will continue to do so and will share what I learn here!
Here's a word cloud that I created using the last paragraph of my dissertation abstrac.
My research involved using LMS tracking data from more than 200 courses and 1700 students. I looked at student-student interaction, student-instructor interaction, and student-content interaction to see if any of these interactions promoted student academic success better than the others. I found that student-student interaction was the best promoter of student academic success in this study, no real surprise there, but I also found that more instructor email in the course had a negative effect on student academic success. This finding caused me to question my results until I ran across Carr's 2014 paper on engagement in which she stated, "Email frequency needs to be monitored as it can be a sign of insufficient information in the course for students or it can be a lack of content support." (p. 102) There were a number of limitations to my study yet I think it did provide some valuable information, so stay tuned for updates!
Carr, M. (2014). The online university classroom: One perspective for effective student engagement and teaching in an online environment. The Journal of Effective
Teaching, 99.
Taylor, D. L. (2014). Interactions in online courses and student academic success (Order
No. 3671767). Available from ProQuest Dissertations & Theses
Global. (1651237829).
