Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

36
Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, Discussions in Classrooms

Transcript of Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Page 1: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Robert Appino

@rappin01

April 20, 2012

Discussions in Classrooms

Page 2: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

http://tinyurl.com/discussionsinclassrooms

Page 3: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Student Participation

Face-to-Face Whole Class Discussions

to

Virtual Discussions

Page 4: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Face-to-Face Discussions

Page 5: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Virtual Discussions

Page 6: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

What is the effect of virtual discussions on students' participation and sense of belonging?

Page 7: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.
Page 8: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

LITERATURE

Page 9: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Jarmon, Lim and Carpenter (2009) "Introduction Pedagogy, Education and Innovation in Virtual Worlds"

says virtual worlds will be used more for teaching and learning in the future.

Page 10: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Friedman, Karniel and Dinur’s (2009) study “Comparing Group Discussion in Virtual and Physical Environments" found that students had a higher number of on-topic discussions in the physical discussion setting versus the virtual discussion setting (p. 290).

Page 11: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Friedman et al. (2009) setup the 3D virtual world Second Life for students to be anonymous (p.288).

Page 12: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Carnegie’s (2003) study, “Teaching a Critical Understanding of Virtual

Environments” says that virtual discussions provided more opportunities for my quieter students.

Page 13: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Carnegie acknowledges that, “[t]he biggest advantage was for students who were shy, self-conscious, or intimidated in face-to-face group meetings” because they were given a different medium to succeed in, not every student will speak up in whole class discussions (2003, p. 63).

Page 14: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Susan Cain’s (2012) book “Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can’t Stop Talking” she confirms this idea by explaining that ‘quiet’ students feel comfortable collaborating in an “online

working group” which is similar to a virtual discussion because “it is a form of solitude” which better meets the needs of

more introverted learners (p. 111).

Page 15: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Wang and Woo’s (2007) study “Comparing Asynchronous Online Discussions and Face-to-Face Discussions in a Classroom Setting” said, “[i]n terms of authenticity, face-to-face discussions were more real and authentic than in-class online discussions because participants could talk to each other in real time, see their facial expressions and clarify matters immediately” (p. 282). In this aspect, face-to-face discussions were regarded as more superior to online discussions.

Page 16: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Wang and Woo (2007) also said that “online discussions were more comfortable, less aggressive and offered more equal opportunities for group members to voice their opinions” (p. 282).

Page 17: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

METHOD

Page 18: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

independent variable = face-to-face standard whole class discussions and

virtual class discussions

dependent variable = quality and

frequency of student’s participation in discussions.

Page 19: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

INTERVENTION

Page 20: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Pre Intervention

students were taught using various face-to-face class discussions for 560 minutes over one eight day rotation cycle.

Page 21: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Post Intervention

variety of virtual discussion formats for 560 minutes over another eight day cycle.

Page 22: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

DATA COLLECTION

Page 23: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Students completed a Discussion Attitudes Survey (Likert Scale) pre virtual discussion and post virtual discussion to determine if student attitudes changed with the intervention

Page 24: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Discussion Participation was measured pre/post intervention using a tally sheet to measure quality and frequency of participation in class discussion

Page 25: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

THREATS TO VALIDITYSubject characteristics - There are twice as many boys than girls (14 boys and 7 girls)

Testing - Student may get nervous taking the Participation Likert Scale

Environmental - Girls students may get more nervous during standard verbal discussions because there are twice as many boys in class (2:1 guy:girl ratio).

Implementation threat - There was bandwidth issues with

the virtual discussion part of the research which prevented us from using a 3D virtual world and restrict us to different virtual learning environment.

Subject characteristics: Students may or may not like interacting in a virtual environment.

Page 26: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

RESULTS: ATTITUDES

Discussion Attitudes Survey a two-tailed t-test showed

that the difference was considered to be not statistically significant

The P value equals 0.3978 (t = 0.8651, df = 19).

The mean gain in discussion attitude pre virtual discussions to post virtual discussions (Pre 26.65, Post 27.25).

Page 27: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.
Page 28: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

RESULTS: DISCUSSION PARTICIPATION FREQUENCY

Discussion Participation Frequency two-tailed t-test

show to be statistically significant with a P value equals 0.0146 (t=2.6748 , df=20). Also the SD value shows less variance during virtual discussion (SD=2.3)

Mean gain of face-to-face standard whole class discussion frequency and virtual class discussion frequency (Standard 7.48, Virtual 10.24).

Page 29: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.
Page 30: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

RESULTS: QUALITY OF PARTICIPATION

Quality of participation was tallied

Discussion Participation Quality OTI results of the two-

tailed t-test was considered to be statistically significant with a P value equals 0.0214 (t=2.4957, df=20).

The SD value shows less variance during virtual discussion (SD=1.36)

Mean gain in participation quality between face-to-face standard whole class discussions to virtual discussions (Standard 5.95, Virtual 7.81)

Page 31: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.
Page 32: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

DISCUSSION

Discussion Participation was affected by virtual discussions

Participation increased in virtual

discussion

Quality of participation also increased

during virtual discussions

Page 33: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Integrate virtual discussions into other classrooms

Page 34: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

REFERENCES

Cain, S. (2012). Quiet: the power of introverts in a world that can't stop talking. New York: Crown Publishers.

Carnegie, T. A. (2003). TeachingaCritical Understandingof Virtual Environments. Business Communication Quarterly, 66(4), 55-64.

Friedman, D., Karniel, Y., & Dinur, A. L. (2009). Comparing Group Discussion in Virtual and Physical Environments. PRESENCE by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 18(4), 286-293.

Jarmon, L., Lim, K. Y., & Carpenter, B. S. (2009). Pedagogy, Education and Innovation in 3-D Virtual Worlds. Journal of Virtual Worlds Research, 2(1), 3-4.

Ligorio, M. B., Cesareni, D., & Schwartz, N. (2008). Collaborative Virtual Environments as Means to Increase the Level of Intersubjectivity in a Distributed Cognition System. Journal of Research on Technology in Education, 40(3), 339-357.

Wang, Q., & Woo, H. L. (2007). Comparing asynchronous online discussions and face-to-face discussions in a classroom setting. British Journal of Educational Technology, 38(2), 272-286.

Page 35: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

ATTRIBUTION - VISUALBirds: by Tim Geers http://www.flickr.com/photos/timypenburg/5271241301/sizes/l/in/photostream/

Trees by Mark Sebastian http://www.flickr.com/photos/markjsebastian/506960906/sizes/l/in/photostream/

Balloons by Tim Geers http://www.flickr.com/photos/timypenburg/5097328888/sizes/l/in/photostream/

Important: by Valerie Everett http://www.flickr.com/photos/valeriebb/290711738/sizes/z/in/photostream/

Mask by zigazou76 http://www.flickr.com/photos/zigazou76/6824175422/sizes/c/in/photostream/

View from the Top by C.M Keiner http://www.flickr.com/photos/cmkeiner/5230441693/sizes/l/in/photostream/

Birds: by Tim Geers http://www.flickr.com/photos/timypenburg/5271241301/sizes/l/in/photostream/

RESOURCESDiscussions in Classrooms: Comparing Face-To-Face Class Discussions to Virtual Discussions by Robert Appino

Page 36: Robert Appino @rappin01 April 20, 2012 Discussions in Classrooms.

Robert Appino

@rappin01

April 20, 2012

Discussions in Classrooms