Fifth
Annual Grant Winners 2004-2005
Stan Hannah, Ph.D., Fischler Graduate School of
Education and Human Services Madeleine
Hellman, Ed.D., HPD – College of Allied Health and
Nursing
Hui Fang Huang Su, Ed.D., Fischler Graduate
School of Education and Human Services
Leanne Lai, Ph.D., HPD – College
of Pharmacy
Diane Lippe, Office of Information Technology
Dean H. Wells Singleton, Fischler Graduate School
of Education and Human Services
Dean Richard Davis, HPD – College
of Allied Health and Nursing
Dean William Hardigan, HPD – College
of Pharmacy
Associate Vice President Virginia McLain,
Office of Information Technology
Title: An
Exploratory Study of the Interrelationships
Between Social Networks and Learning
Communities
Abstract:
The purpose of this study is to use social network
analysis to gain a greater understanding of how online
learning communities can be used to enhance the delivery
of online instruction. To achieve this goal, this project
will investigate how online learning communities are
created and evolve over time. More specifically, the study
will investigate how information flows and network structure
can be used to gain a greater understanding of online
communities. Since communication, the stock in trade of education,
is “undergoing
a radical transformation,” then the way in which
we study communication must change (Monge & Contractor,
2003).
Although the number of courses offered over the Internet
has grown dramatically during the past five years, nearly
all of the research on the effectiveness of online courses
has been either anecdotal or based on a comparison of test
scores and student evaluations. With few exceptions, educators
have not investigated the complex patterns of communication
that take place in an online learning community. As a result,
educators know very little about how online cliques, gatekeepers,
mentors, or network structure impact the online learning
environment.
This project will study three online communities: international
pharmacy students, physical therapy doctoral students,
and education doctoral students and alumni. The study will
map the network structure of each group of students and
its evolution during the next year. Data will be collected
on the overall pattern of relations, the centrality of
different roles, and the structure of the network. Changes
in the network structure will be monitored to determine
if changes in instruction, student roles, or mentor roles
are reflected in the structure of the social network.
The data collected from the network analysis, interviews,
and focus groups will then be analyzed for common themes,
contradictions, or confirmatory support.
NUD*IST will be used to store and analyze the focus group
data. GRADAP will be used to analyze the social network analysis.
The data collected from the focus groups, interviews, and
the network analysis data will then be compared and analyzed
by the team members to identify common themes as well as
ideas for additional research.