Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Comparing Community of Inquiry and
Online Collaborative Learning
- Community of Inquiry
Anmerkungen:
- Doesn't really list specific instructional guidelines and, as such is more of a theory than a model
- Subject matter expert, intellectual/scholarly leader; Designer, facilitator,
& director of learners' social & cognitive processes, Interaction facilitator,
'master learner'
- Notice that the teacher is
concerned with cognitive &
social/motivational factors.
- To be present - cognitively & socially; to work with group to explore,
integrate, and resolve ideas; to interact and to help become 'master learner'
- Content - activity or reading - triggers intellectual curiosity; discussion
becomes part of content to explore, integrate, resolve ideas
- Discussion, Direction Instruction, pragmatic inquiry
- Online environments - synchronous & asynchronous
- Increased engagement, excellent for developing HOTS, faculty may find it easier
to transition to collaborative learning since this theory has elements of direct
instruction,
- Complex, evaluating indicators for social, cognitive, teaching presence is challenging &
time-consuming, a lot of pressure on teacher to create and maintain an optimal educational
experience. Difficult to get students to go beyond the 'exploration' phase.
- Online Collaborative Learning Theory
Anmerkungen:
- Lists specific instructional activities so it's more of a model in support of the theory of collaborative learning
- Act as representative 'expert' in field with knowledge of values/norms/foundational
knowledge in field. Lead the group through discussion & contribute to knowledge
community
- Engage in discourse - brainstorm,
organize, synthesize
- Discussion is primary source of content,; textbooks, etc. are 'supplementary
- Asynchronous Discussion
- online asynchronous environments; primary learning
objectives/outcomes are HOTS
- Excellent for developing higher order thinking skills
- Helping maintain intellectual rigor in discussions is time consuming;
this model doesn't scale well. Also, in its original form, it doesn't
support STEM well.. Discussion is a highly culturally contextualized
activity. This could be challenging for cliverse classrooms.
- Notice that the teacher's primary focus is
on cognitive development. Not much
mention is made of social/motivational
factors.
- Role of Teacher
- Role of Student
- Role of Content
- Instructional Methods Used
- Context
- Benefits
- Challenges