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Blended Learning Environments, Active Participation, and Student
Success
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Sarah Ransdell, PhD1
Sandrine Gaillard-Kenney, EdD2
- Associate Professor, College of Allied Health and
Nursing
- Associate Professor, Chair,
Department of Health Science
Nova Southeastern University
United States
CITATION:
Ransdell, S., Gaillard-Kenney, S. Blended learning environments, active participation, and
student success . The Internet Journal of Allied Health Sciences and
Practice. Jan 2009, Volume 7 Number 1.
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ABSTRACT
Purpose:
Online discussion within blended learning environments is essential
to student success in a well-designed course.
Our research briefly describes ways in which online
discussion can be evaluated to predict student learning.
The paper will present some online data regarding active and
passive use of Web-CT-based course content as it relates to student
performance. Methods: Thirty-seven RN (Registered Nurse) to BSN (Bachelor of
Science in Nursing) students in a blended online and face-to-face
biostatistics course participated in this research for 15 weeks. Results:
Students who were engaged in active, original postings to discussion
threads in response to relevant, course-based reading were most
likely to do well, regardless of the total frequency of their visits
to the discussion site.
Students who engaged in frequent, but passive, less relevant
postings did not do as well in terms of midterm quizzes or final
grades. Discussion:
Qualitative discussion rubrics can be labor-intensive; in large
classes, it may be possible to supplement them with quantitative,
Web-CT records of overall postings, original postings, follow-up
postings, and total visits in order to determine which students are
using discussion as a useful tool.
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Keywords
and terms: blended learning, grading of participation,
online discussion, qualitative and quantitative evaluations, Web-CT. |
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