Understanding Self-Regulated Learning and Its Importance in Online Learning

Author(s):  
Dina M. Schwam ◽  
Nannette Commander ◽  
Daphne Greenberg

With the rise in online course offerings, coupled with the growth in online course enrollment, it is surprising that drop-out rates among online courses are higher than in face-to-face courses. This has placed an importance on understanding what contributes to successful learning in online courses and how to address student needs to increase student success. Theories and conceptual models supported by research have explained the complexity of self-regulated learning and the important role metacognition and motivation play in the processes within self-regulated learning. Researchers continue to explore the interconnected relationship within the multiple constructs of self-regulated learning and academic success and its importance in online learning. It is important that instructors have an understanding of the many areas that influence student learning. Through a holistic approach addressing individual difference in supporting students' needs, instructors can encourage the development of self-regulated learning skills through scaffolding different experiences involving instruction.

Author(s):  
Solomon Sunday Oyelere ◽  
Sunday Adewale Olaleye ◽  
Oluwafemi Samson Balogun ◽  
Łukasz Tomczyk

AbstractThis study uses the quantitative research approach to examine the connection between students’ teamwork experience, self-regulated learning, technology self-efficacy, and performance in an online educational technology course. Sixty-three (63) students participated in this study. The study data were collected through an online questionnaire that included background information, course satisfaction, motivation strategies for learning, and online technology self-efficacy, to study the variables’ interactions using quantitative research. To realize this study’s aims, multivariate regression and correlation approaches were employed to analyze the online students’ data. The multivariate regression analysis results show a relationship between self-regulated learning, the online course level, and the number of online courses that the students have completed. Right self-regulated learning strategies in online courses motivate students to strive for a good teamwork experience, leading to increased interest in online learning. In addition, the results also show that there is a relationship between satisfaction and the level of the online course. Achieving good grades makes the student more satisfied and improves the level of technology use. Finally, this study established a relationship between the students’ motivation and the online course level. Therefore, teachers and course designers should implement learning objects that promote students’ engagement and motivation in online learning environments.


2016 ◽  
pp. 586-614
Author(s):  
Juhong Christie Liu ◽  
Elaine Roberts Kaye

Online learning readiness is fundamental to student successful participation, presence, and interaction in online courses. Effective facilitation of these key components depends on sound instructional design. In self-directed online environments, learner-content interaction and scaffolding self-regulated learning have been found of primary importance to generate meaningful learning. To provide a solution to the challenges of interoperability of various functions in synchronous online learning environments, this chapter presents a case study about the design and development of a self-paced orientation to help students acquire online learning readiness. Learner-content interaction is strategically utilized in the design to scaffold self-regulated learning. The results of the case study demonstrate that this orientation positively prepares students to be ready for learning in a synchronous online environment. The approach can be of practical use to individuals and groups.


Author(s):  
Chia-Wen Tsai ◽  
Pei-Di Shen

Many educational institutions provide online courses; however, the question whether they can be as effective as those offered in the face-to-face classroom format still exists. In addition, it also remains unclear whether every subject is appropriate to be delivered in web-based learning environments. Thus, the authors redesigned two courses with different orientations and conducted a quasi-experiment to examine the effects of web-enabled self-regulated learning (SRL) in different course orientations on students’ computing skills. Four classes with 173 students from the courses ‘Database Management System’ and ‘Packaged Software and Application’ were divided into 2 (Design-oriented vs. Procedural-oriented) × 2 (SRL vs. non-SRL) experimental groups. The results showed that students who received the intervention of web-enabled SRL had significantly higher grades on the examination for certificates than those that did not receive this intervention, whether in design-oriented or procedural-oriented computing courses. Moreover, students in the two different courses had very similar scores, which resulted in non-significant differences in their end-of-term computing skills.


2021 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yan DAI

In the spring semester of 2020, all Chinese higher education institutions delivered courses online across the nation in response to the COVID-19. This study explores Chinese college students’ self-regulated learning, academic entitlement, and academic achievement during the transitioning from face-to-face to online learning environments during this special time. Structure equation modeling was conducted, and results indicate that academic entitlement associates with students’ online learning academic achievement. Whereas self-regulated learning does not relate to academic achievement in the online learning setting. Additionally, academic entitlement is marginally associated with academic achievement only among male students, while self-regulated learning is not a significant predictor for both genders. However, self-regulated learning is marginally linked with higher academic achievement among students who do not have previous online learning experiences but not among those who took online courses before.


2021 ◽  
Vol 25 (3) ◽  
Author(s):  
Houston Heflin ◽  
Suzanne Macaluso

Assessing the degree to which students engage and learn from their online courses will be important as online courses are becoming more ubiquitous. This study sought to capture student perceptions of their independence as learners, their level of engagement, their effort exerted, and the amount of information they learned in online courses. The study was conducted over three years with 455 students who completed a self-assessment at the end of an intensive summer online course. Results showed an equal number of students agreeing and disagreeing that online courses help students learn the same amount of information encountered in a face-to-face course. The majority of students reported they were more independent (84.4%), were more engaged (54.5%) and exerted more effort (57.4%), in their online course than a typical face-to-face class. Recommendations are made for faculty creating online courses who have the opportunity to coach students on how to succeed in the online learning environment.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meggy Lachenal ◽  
Gilles Tanguy ◽  
Pascal DESSENNE ◽  
Morgane Rude ◽  
Ludivine Doly ◽  
...  

BACKGROUND Patients living in precarity have poorer health as well as poorer access to healthcare and disease prevention [1],[2]. What's more, their management requires a blend of medical and social care which students have little training in. The use of online courses is gaining ground in initial and continuing medical education. Online learning maximizes the number of people who can be trained while minimizing training time. It also allows the learner to follow their course at times and locations of their choosing, with their learning made easier through illustrations and interactive links [3]. Online learning’s cost-effectiveness is one advantage sometimes put forward, but it has rarely been studied [4]. Drawbacks include non-completion of the course, geographical isolation and poor interfaces. In a meta-analysis of the effectiveness of online learning among health professionals in 2008 [5], Cook et al. found it to be superior to no training at all but not significantly better than a lecture. Only a few authors have found online courses to be more effective than classroom-based ones [6],[7]. OBJECTIVE Few learning resources are available to French medical students regarding the management of patients facing precarity. The result is poor knowledge of the issue and inappropriate management. Using a pragmatic approach, this study aimed to develop an online course and evaluate its effect on knowledge levels immediately after the course by comparing it against a classroom lecture. METHODS We used a pragmatic approach to compare two groups of medical students in a prospective comparative single-center study. Approval was obtained from both the Commission Nationale de l’Informatique et des Libertés (CNIL), a data protection agency, and the Sud-Est VI Clermont-Ferrand institutional review board. The online and classroom courses were put together by a committee of experts and a team of trainers. All family medicine interns of the class of 2016 (n=87) were invited to attend a course entitled "Health and Precarity" on March 21, 2019. The classroom and online learning groups were determined by alphabetical order. A time for discussion with the trainers was organized after the course for both groups. The online course was organized in the computer room of the faculty. Knowledge was assessed through a questionnaire involving 18 multiple-choice questions devised and validated by the expert committee. Of these 18 questions, 6 tested general knowledge of precarity in medicine (subgroup1), 8 related to existing support services and benefits (subgroup2) and 4 went back over specific cases of precarity in medicine (migrant patients, unaccompanied minors, etc.) (subgroup3). In both groups, the questionnaires were given to the students before the training course (T0) and then immediately afterward (T1). The primary endpoint was improvement after the course, defined as the difference in points achieved on the questionnaires between T1 and T0. The secondary endpoint was the interns' satisfaction with the type of training. Statistical analyses were conducted using SAS 9.4 software at a two-tailed significance level of 5%. Quantitative variables were compared using Student's t-test, while any association between two quantitative variables was compared using Pearson's linear correlation coefficient. RESULTS Pre-training knowledge was similar in the two groups (table I). The increase in knowledge after training was significant regardless of the type of training taken. It was higher in the online learning group (+27.8 points±11.2) than in the classroom group (+9.1 points±9.0 (p<0.0001) (figure1). All online students improved their scores after the course (by between +6 and +50 points) whereas the classroom group’s scores at the same time point differed by between -14 to +25 points, with four students achieving lower scores after the course. On subgroup analysis, a significant difference was observed (p<0.0001) between the online and classroom groups with regard to subgroups 1 (general knowledge) and 2 (support services and benefits) but not subgroup 3 (specific cases of precarity) (p=0.09). Overall satisfaction was significantly better in the online group (34.5/40 vs. 27.1/40, p<0.0001). Lastly, total cost for developing the online course was estimated at €18,000. CONCLUSIONS Our study shows a significantly higher increase in knowledge among online students than classroom students for learning about precarity in medicine. Satisfaction was also higher among online students. Online learning is therefore an effective tool that offers a number of advantages for both the learner and the trainer. However, there is still a need in online learning for time for face-to-face discussion, particularly with complex topics like handling precarity in medicine. Blended learning courses that combine classroom sessions with online learning have demonstrated their effectiveness and should be the preferred option for medical education [8],[9]. That said, the drawbacks of online learning warrant consideration, such as their time-consuming nature owing to the high number of activities (acting and filming consultations) coupled with the high cost of producing them. Also worth bearing in mind is regular updating of the course, which is again time-consuming and costly. It must also be possible to check whether the online course has been followed by the students. Lastly, our study only investigated knowledge levels immediately after the course. Some studies have shown that at later time points the increase in knowledge is not significantly higher between online and classroom courses [10],[11],[12]. All in all, online learning is a useful alternative to classroom learning for teaching about precarity in medicine but it should be combined with time for face-to-face discussion. The cost and time it takes to put together and produce a good-quality online course must be borne in mind if incorporating it into third-level teaching of family medicine.


10.28945/4040 ◽  
2018 ◽  

Aim/Purpose: To investigate anxiety in online courses and its relationship with overall online courses satisfaction as it may vary with online courses experience. Background: Delivering online courses in higher education institutions continue to increase. Anxieties seem to be persistent. Although there are many technology and internet related anxieties studies, online courses anxieties are relatively scarce. The cause for this anxiety has not been resolved or addressed sufficiently. This study takes part in this quest. Methodology: A fully online course with not face to face interaction was used for the study. A survey methodology approach was used for the anxiety scale measurements. Over 1400 students participated in the survey. Contribution: Students taking online courses continue to be challenged with anxieties. Their experiences (number of courses taken) with online courses may influence their anxieties and satisfaction levels, but that has not been studies. We contribute to this body of literature. Findings: One third of students reported to continue to experience anxiety while taking their online courses. The effect of their anxieties on their satisfaction does not seem to be influenced by their online course experience. Recommendations for Practitioners: Focus on the various elements that may influence anxieties and satisfaction of students while taking courses. For IT designers, interface and point of interactions may be the aspect to pay attention to, while professors would need to consider course pedagogy and its interaction within the IT learning environment. Recommendation for Researchers: Anxiety in online learning should take front stage as it represents an underlying stream of influence on all research in the field. Further study of the effect of online course experience on satisfaction and anxiety is necessary. Impact on Society: Anxiety in learning has many detrimental effects that last a student’s career and personality over their entire life. The impact of reducing anxieties while online learning is significant and tangible especially that online learning is at its initial stages of an exponential growth and will change the world sooner than later. Future Research: Pedagogy for efficient and effective online courses to reduce anxieties and in-crease satisfaction.


2016 ◽  
Vol 20 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Krystle Phirangee

Despite the growth of its popularity in recent years, online learning has demonstrated high dropout rates compared to dropout rates in traditional face-to-face courses. Prior research attributes attrition to the physical isolation of students from one another and the lack of interaction between and among them—factors which foster feelings of alienation, isolation, and disconnection. The goal of this research study was to more deeply understand the causes of such negative feelings, which may eventually lead students to drop out of online courses. More specifically, this study adopted a qualitative approach by interviewing six graduate students to further explore which specific learner-learner interactions weaken online students’ sense of community. Seven learner-learner, interactions were identified: the keener, lack of meaningful data, selective listening, lack of attribution, going off on tangents, editing notes, and cultural exclusion.


Author(s):  
Juhong Christie Liu ◽  
Elaine Roberts Kaye

Online learning readiness is fundamental to student successful participation, presence, and interaction in online courses. Effective facilitation of these key components depends on sound instructional design. In self-directed online environments, learner-content interaction and scaffolding self-regulated learning have been found of primary importance to generate meaningful learning. To provide a solution to the challenges of interoperability of various functions in synchronous online learning environments, this chapter presents a case study about the design and development of a self-paced orientation to help students acquire online learning readiness. Learner-content interaction is strategically utilized in the design to scaffold self-regulated learning. The results of the case study demonstrate that this orientation positively prepares students to be ready for learning in a synchronous online environment. The approach can be of practical use to individuals and groups.


Author(s):  
Stephanie J. Etter ◽  
Lisa T. Byrnes

Online learning is the fastest growing segment in the educational marketplace (Conhaim, 2003). As the number of online courses increases and distance learning programs grow in popularity, questions of quality and comparability of online courses with traditional methods naturally arise (Schulman & Sims, 1999). While online learning is the fastest growing educational segment, partly in thanks to on-campus students who choose to take courses online, there are still debates about not only the quality of the course content, but the quality of the technology used as well. According to Bowman (2003), in “the history of higher education, online classes are relatively new, and it is yet to be determined how to take full advantage of the technology” (p. 73). Traditional face-to-face courses, which may have been proven successful in terms of evaluations and outcomes assessments, are increasingly being converted to online courses. A study by Smith, Ferguson, and Caris (2000) concluded: “Contrary to intuition, current Web-based online college courses are not an alienating, mass-produced product. They are a laborintensive, highly text-based, intellectually challenging forum which elicits deeper thinking on the part of the students” (p. 67). Converting a traditional classroom course that is intellectually challenging and that elicits deeper thinking into an online course that can do the same can be a harrowing task. The process of converting a face-to-face course into an online course without compromising the course’s integrity and quality is a difficult burden to overcome. The burden of the conversion process can be eased, however, through the use of course maps.


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