Chatrooms in MOOCs: all talk and no action

Derrick Coetzee, A. Fox, Marti A. Hearst, Bjoern Hartmann
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引用次数: 64

Abstract

We study effects of introducing a real-time chatroom into a massive open online course with several thousand students, supplementing an existing forum. The chatroom was supported by teaching assistants, and generated thousands of lines of discussion by 28\% of 681 consenting chat condition participants, mostly on-topic. Despite this, chat activity remained low ($\mu=8.2$ messages per hour) and we could find no significant effect of chat use on objective or subjective dependent variables such as grades, retention, forum participation, or students' sense of community. Further investigation reveals that only 12\% of chat participants have substantive interactions, while the remainder are either passive or have trivial interactions that are unlikely to result in learning. We also find that pervasive, highly visible chat interfaces are highly effective in encouraging both active and substantive participation in chat. When compared to chat interfaces that are restricted to a single webpage, the pervasive interface exhibits \changes{2.8 times} as many users with substantive interactions.
mooc的聊天室:只说不做
我们研究将实时聊天室引入有数千名学生的大型开放式在线课程的效果,以补充现有的论坛。该聊天室由助教提供支持,681名同意聊天条件的参与者中有28%的人发表了数千条讨论,大多数都是关于主题的。尽管如此,聊天活动仍然很低($\mu=8.2$消息/小时),我们可以发现聊天使用对客观或主观因变量(如成绩,保留,论坛参与或学生的社区意识)没有显着影响。进一步的调查显示,只有12%的聊天参与者有实质性的互动,而其余的人要么是被动的,要么是不太可能导致学习的琐碎互动。我们还发现,无处不在的、高度可见的聊天界面在鼓励积极和实质性地参与聊天方面非常有效。与仅限于单个网页的聊天界面相比,普普通通的界面显示出具有实质性交互的用户数量的2.8倍。
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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