Gale Parchoma University of Calgary

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RESEARCHING BLENDED LEARNING IN HIGHER EDUCATION: POTENTIAL IMPLICATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR DESIGN AND PRACTICE Gale Parchoma University of Calgary OCULL - 2013

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Researching blended learning in higher education: Potential Implications and future directions for Design and practice . Gale Parchoma University of Calgary. OCULL - 2013. Where is the blend in blended learning?. Garrison & Kanuka (2004 ). Community of Inquiry. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Gale Parchoma University of Calgary

RESEARCHING BLENDED LEARNING IN HIGHER EDUCATION: POTENTIAL IMPLICATIONS AND FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR DESIGN AND PRACTICE

Gale ParchomaUniversity of CalgaryOCULL - 2013

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Where is the blend in blended learning?

Garrison & Kanuka (2004)

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Community of Inquiry

Garrison, Archer, and Anderson (2000)

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Examples A & B

0’Keffe & Parchoma (under review)

Shahoumian, Parchoma, Zenios, Hanson, Dickinson, & Pimblett (2012)

A

B

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Example C – Part 1

Instructor(small ones technical support) Student

Parchoma and Brooks (2007)

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Example C – Part 2

Week 2 Week 9

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Online ‘Presences’ across Blends

A. Limited teaching and cognitive presence. No peer-to-peer social presence. B. Limited teaching presence. Back channel (social media) mediation of cognitive and social presence. C. Sustained but contained teaching, cognitive, and social presence.

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Implications and Research Opportunities

Garrison, Cleveland-Innes , & Shing Fung (2010)

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References

Garrison, D. R., Anderson, T., & Archer, W. (2000). Critical inquiry in a text-based environment: Computer conferencing in higher education. Internet and Higher Education, 11(2), 1-14.

Garrison, D. R., Clevedland-Ives, M., & Shing Fung, T. (2010). Exploring causal relationships among teaching, cognitive and social presence: Student perceptions of the community of inquiry framework. Internet and Higher Education, 13, 31-36.

Garrison, D. R., & Kanuka, H. (2004). Blended learning: Uncovering its transformative potential in higher education. The Internet and Higher Education, 7(2), 95-105.

Kim, K.-J., Bonk, C. J., & Teng, Y.-T. (2009). The present state and future trends of blended learning in workplace learning settings across five countries. Asia Pacific Education Review, 10(3), 299-308.

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References O’Keefe, C. & Parchoma, G. (Under review).

Performing blended learning as a product and a service. Ninth International Conference on Networked Learning: Edinburgh.

Parchoma, G. & Brooks, C. (2007). Tracking the development of a learning community: A study of pedagogical strategies for supporting students in engaging in content and forming a learning community. CADE: Winnipeg.

Shahoumian, A., Parchoma, G., Zenios, M., Hanson, J., Dickinson, M., & Pimblett, M. (2012). A networked learning-informed investigation of introducing blended simulation based medical education in a UK National Health Service (NHS) context. In V. Hodgson, C. Jones, M. ed Latt, D. McConnell, & P. Sloep (Eds.), Proceedings of the 8th International Conference on Networked Learning, Maastricht, The Netherlands.