Did We Become a Community? Multiple Methods for Identifying Community and Its Constituent Elements in Formal Online Learning Environments

Did We Become a Community? Multiple Methods for Identifying Community and Its Constituent Elements in Formal Online Learning Environments

Richard A. Schwier, Ben K. Daniel
Copyright: © 2007 |Pages: 25
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59904-358-6.ch002
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Abstract

To understand the nature of formal virtual learning communities in higher education, we are employing a variety of user-centred evaluation approaches to examine methods for determining whether a community exists, and if it does, to isolate and understand interactions among its constituent elements, and ultimately to build a model of formal virtual learning communities. This chapter presents the methods we are employing to answer these seemingly simple questions, including user perceptions of community (Sense of Community Index, Classroom Community Scale), interaction analysis (density, reciprocity,) content analysis (transcript analysis, interviews, focus groups), paired-comparison analysis (Thurstone scaling) and community modeling techniques (Bayesian Belief Network analysis).

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