Upcoming Presentations

League for Innovation in the Community College

Beyond Engagement: Evidence-Based Strategies for Improving Learning Online

Date & Time TBD

Students and faculty both encounter challenges in the online environment. These challenges frequently manifest and are understood in terms of low student engagement. In this session, researchers and community college faculty will present a specific and actionable framework to bolster students’ abilities to remain motivated and manage their learning processes in online courses. The presenters refer to these mutually reinforcing mindsets and behaviors as self-directed learning (SDL) skills and they include motivational processes (e.g., self-efficacy), metacognitive processes (e.g., planning), and applied learning processes (e.g., help seeking). Presenters will describe a set of evidence-based instructional strategies to support SDL developed in collaboration with instructors at broad-access institutions. Speakers will share research findings on how the strategies have been implemented in postsecondary online STEM courses and their effect on student outcomes. A community college faculty member will share their experience implementing the strategies in an online biology course.

Presenters

Ellen Wasserman, Research Associate, CCRC

Allystair Jones, Department Chair, Science & Professor of Biology, Odessa College

Keena Walters, Education Research Associate, SRI Education

Creating Online Environments to Promote Motivation and Learning: Perspectives from Students

February 20, 2024
Orlando, FL

Success rates in online courses are often lower than in courses delivered in-person, with some studies showing that online courses exacerbate inequitable outcomes. In this session, attendees will learn about an evidence-based framework of skills and mindsets that can support student learning and success in online courses. Using this framework, researchers from the Postsecondary Teaching with Technology Collaborative presented findings on how students perceive online learning environments. Drawing on survey and interview data collected at eight colleges, the session will include examples of course design features and instructional strategies that enhance students’ motivation, sense of belonging, and self-efficacy as well as behaviors such as time management and help-seeking. Presenters also draw on student data to identify aspects of online learning environments that create barriers to success, particularly for students from historically underrepresented groups in higher education.

Participants

Krystal Thomas
Education Researcher
SRI Education
Senior Research Assistant
CCRC
Jill Taylor
Assistant Professor of Mathematics
Tulsa Community College

Associated Project(s)