3.8 Article

Classroom Community and Time: Comparing Students? Perceptions of Classroom Community in Traditional vs. Accelerated Online Courses

Journal

ONLINE LEARNING
Volume 26, Issue 4, Pages 59-77

Publisher

ONLINE LEARNING CONSORTIUM
DOI: 10.24059/olj.v26i4.3498

Keywords

classroom community; community; connectedness; online learning; accelerated; social presence

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Online educators often try different methods to create a sense of classroom community in their online courses. This study found no significant difference in students' perceptions of classroom community between traditional length online courses and accelerated online courses. However, students rated the accelerated courses higher in terms of classroom community.
Online educators regularly experiment with ways to create a sense of classroom community in the online courses they design and teach. They do this in part to battle feelings of isolation and loneliness but also to align with prevailing theories of learning (e.g., social constructivism) as well as to mimic idealized in-person face-to-face learning experiences. However, little is known about how well a sense of community is developed in accelerated online courses. Given this, we investigated students' perceptions of classroom community in traditional length online courses (e.g., 15-week courses) and accelerated online courses (e.g., 7-week courses) taught by the same instructors. The results showed that there was not a statistically significant difference in students' perceptions of classroom community between the 15-week and 7-week courses. Students in this study rated the accelerated 7-week courses as having a higher sense of classroom community. In this paper, we present the results of our inquiry. We conclude with the implications of our research on research and practice.

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