Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
357770 | The Internet and Higher Education | 2013 | 13 Pages |
This paper examines the relationships between the elements of the Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework, disciplinary differences, perceived learning, instructor effectiveness, and delivery medium satisfaction. Specifically, the proposed research examines whether disciplinary differences such as those proposed by Biglan (1973a, 1973b) moderate the relationships between social, cognitive, and/or teaching presence and online course outcomes. Drawing from the results of a two-year study of students in over 50 online MBA courses, we found that disciplinary effects moderated the relationships between facilitating discourse, direct instruction and perceived student learning. Disciplinary effects did moderate the relationship between CoI elements and perceptions of instructor effectiveness. As disciplines moved closer to “pure” or “hard” status, social presence became positively associated and cognitive presence became negatively associated with perceived instructor effectiveness.
► We examine the CoI framework, disciplinary differences, and course outcomes. ► Academic discipline moderated the relationships of facilitating discourse and direct instruction and perceived learning. ► Academic discipline moderated social presence and instructor effectiveness. ► Academic discipline moderated cognitive presence and instructor effectiveness. ► Instructors in quantitative disciplines may benefit most from high social presence.