I Do Better, Feel Less Stress and Am Happier” – A Humanist and Affective Perspective on Student Engagement in an Online Class

InSITE Conference Pub Date : 1900-01-01 DOI:10.28945/4964
Geraldine Torris-Steele
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Abstract

Aim/Purpose: Fostering student engagement is one of the great challenges of teaching, especially in online learning environments. An educators’ assumptions and beliefs about what student engagement is and how it manifests will shape the strategies they design to engage students in learning. However, there is no agreement on the definition of concept of student engagement and it re-mains a vague construct. Background: Adopting the principles of user-centered design, the author maintains that to design learning experiences which better support student engagement it is important to gain insights into how students perceive and operationalize the concept of engagement in learning. The recent challenges of teaching effectively online prompted the author to reflect more deeply on the concept of engagement and how it might be achieved. Methodology: In the tradition of reflective teaching, the author undertook an informal, qualitative inquiry in her classroom, administering a brief questionnaire to students in her online class. When the themes which emerged were integrated with other literature and findings from the author’s earlier classroom inquiry, some insights were gained into how students ‘operationalize’ the concept of engagement, and weight was added to the authors’ premise of the value of humanistic approaches to university teaching, the need for greater emphasis on student-teacher connection and the necessity of considering the affective domain alongside the cognitive domain in learning in higher education. The insights were brought together and visualized in a conceptual model of student engagement. Contribution: The conceptual model presented in the present paper reflects the author’s present ‘mental model’ of student engagement in classes online and, when the opportunity arrives, in face-to-face classes as well. This mental model shapes the authors’ course design, learning activities and the delivery of the course. Although the elements of the model are not ‘new’, the model synthesizes several related concepts necessary to a humanist approach to under-standing student engagement. It is hoped that the model and discussion presented will be stimulus for further rich discussion around the nature of student engagement. Findings: Interestingly, the affective rather than the cognitive domain framed students’ perspectives on what engagement ‘looks like to them’ and on what teachers should do to engage them. Recommendations for Practitioners: By sharing the process through which the author arrived at this understanding of student engagement, the author has also sought to highlight three key points: the importance of including the ‘student perspectives and expectations’ against which educators can examine their own assumptions as part of the process reflective teaching practices; the usefulness of integrating theoretical and philosophical frameworks in our understandings of student engagement and how it might be nurtured, and finally the necessity of affording greater influence to humanism and the affective domain in higher education. The findings emphasize the necessity of considering the affective dimension of engagement as an essential condition for cognitive engagement and as inextricable from the cognitive dimension of engagement. Recommendations for Researchers: The emphasis in research engagement learning and teaching is on how we (the educators) can do this better, how we can better engage students. While the student perspective is often formulated from data obtained through surveys and focus groups, researchers in learning engagement are working with their own understandings (albeit supported by empirical research). It is crucial for deeper insight to also understand the students’ conceptualization of the phenomena being researched. Bringing the principles of design thinking to bear on educational research will likely provide greater depth of insight. Impact on Society: Empirical, formal, and structured research is undeniably essential to advancing human endeavor in any field, including learning and teaching. It is however important to recognize informal research in the form of classroom inquiry as part of teachers’ reflexive practice is also legitimate and useful to advancing understanding of complex phenomenon such as student engagement in learning through multiple perspectives and experiences. Future Research: Further research on the nature of student engagement in different contexts and against different theoretical frameworks is warranted as is empirical investigation of the premise of the value of humanism and the affective do-main in defining and measuring student engagement in higher education.
我做得更好,感觉压力更少,更快乐”——对在线课堂中学生参与的人文主义和情感观点
目标/目的:培养学生的参与度是教学的一大挑战,尤其是在在线学习环境中。教育者对学生参与是什么以及它如何表现的假设和信念将塑造他们设计的让学生参与学习的策略。然而,关于学生参与的概念的定义并没有达成一致,它仍然是一个模糊的概念。背景:采用以用户为中心的设计原则,作者认为,为了设计更好地支持学生参与的学习体验,重要的是要了解学生如何感知和操作参与学习的概念。最近有效在线教学面临的挑战促使作者更深入地思考参与的概念以及如何实现这一概念。方法:在反思性教学的传统中,作者在她的课堂上进行了非正式的定性调查,在她的在线课堂上对学生进行了简短的问卷调查。当出现的主题与作者早期课堂调查的其他文献和发现相结合时,对学生如何“操作”参与概念获得了一些见解,并且增加了作者的人本主义方法对大学教学的价值的前提,需要更加强调学生与教师的联系,以及在高等教育学习中考虑情感领域和认知领域的必要性。这些见解汇集在一起,并在学生参与的概念模型中可视化。贡献:本文中提出的概念模型反映了作者目前对学生参与在线课程的“心理模型”,当机会到来时,也会参与面对面的课程。这种思维模式塑造了作者的课程设计、学习活动和课程交付。虽然该模型的元素不是“新”的,但该模型综合了几个相关的概念,这是理解学生参与的人文主义方法所必需的。我们希望所提出的模型和讨论能够激发围绕学生参与本质的进一步丰富的讨论。有趣的是,情感领域而不是认知领域构建了学生对“对他们来说”什么是参与以及教师应该做些什么来参与的观点。对实践者的建议:通过分享作者对学生参与的理解的过程,作者还试图强调三个关键点:包括“学生的观点和期望”的重要性,作为反思性教学实践过程的一部分,教育者可以根据这些观点来检查他们自己的假设;整合理论和哲学框架在我们理解学生参与以及如何培养学生参与方面的有用性,最后是在高等教育中为人文主义和情感领域提供更大影响的必要性。研究结果强调,有必要将情感维度的投入视为认知投入的必要条件,并且与认知维度的投入密不可分。对研究人员的建议:研究参与学习和教学的重点是我们(教育者)如何能做得更好,我们如何能更好地吸引学生。虽然学生的观点通常是通过调查和焦点小组获得的数据来制定的,但学习参与的研究人员正在用他们自己的理解来工作(尽管得到实证研究的支持)。了解学生对所研究现象的概念化,对于更深入的理解是至关重要的。将设计思维的原则运用到教育研究中可能会提供更深入的见解。对社会的影响:实证的、正式的和结构化的研究对于推进人类在任何领域的努力都是不可否认的,包括学习和教学。然而,重要的是要认识到,作为教师反思性实践的一部分,课堂探究形式的非正式研究也是合理的,有助于促进对复杂现象的理解,例如学生通过多种视角和经验参与学习。未来研究:在不同的背景和不同的理论框架下,对学生参与的性质进行进一步的研究是必要的,对人文主义价值的前提和在定义和衡量高等教育中学生参与的情感主要因素进行实证调查是必要的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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