Community of Inquiry on Facebook in a Formal Learning Setting in Higher Education

This study demonstrates an application of Facebook for higher education in science (STEM), and it clarifies its impact on students’ learning in a formal online learning setting. A combined qualitative and quantitative approach was used. Messages posted on Facebook were classified by qualit...

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Main Authors: Masood Nazir, Natasa Brouwer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-01-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/9/1/10
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spelling doaj-0b3f47b49fcd4b88ae0888398b0ee86c2020-11-24T23:24:43ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022019-01-01911010.3390/educsci9010010educsci9010010Community of Inquiry on Facebook in a Formal Learning Setting in Higher EducationMasood Nazir0Natasa Brouwer1University of Amsterdam, Weesperzijde 190, 1097 DZ Amsterdam, The NetherlandsFaculty of Science, University of Amsterdam, P.O. Box 94214, 1090 GE Amsterdam, The NetherlandsThis study demonstrates an application of Facebook for higher education in science (STEM), and it clarifies its impact on students’ learning in a formal online learning setting. A combined qualitative and quantitative approach was used. Messages posted on Facebook were classified by qualitative transcript analysis. The perception and experience of students with Facebook were recorded by means of pre- and post-tests, using a treatment/control group approach. The results show that an integral Community of Inquiry (CoI) was formed on Facebook within the regular online course, encompassing all relevant CoI interactions leading to a powerful educational experience. Additionally, a type of CoI interaction “student–community” is observed, which was not reported before. The results show that the use of Facebook had positive effects on students’ learning, only when the activities on Facebook were constructively integrated in a course design, and a moderator was present. More research is needed to include larger group sizes and other course designs.http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/9/1/10higher educationonline learningCommunity of Inquirysocial networkstranscript analysisstudents’ perception
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Masood Nazir
Natasa Brouwer
spellingShingle Masood Nazir
Natasa Brouwer
Community of Inquiry on Facebook in a Formal Learning Setting in Higher Education
Education Sciences
higher education
online learning
Community of Inquiry
social networks
transcript analysis
students’ perception
author_facet Masood Nazir
Natasa Brouwer
author_sort Masood Nazir
title Community of Inquiry on Facebook in a Formal Learning Setting in Higher Education
title_short Community of Inquiry on Facebook in a Formal Learning Setting in Higher Education
title_full Community of Inquiry on Facebook in a Formal Learning Setting in Higher Education
title_fullStr Community of Inquiry on Facebook in a Formal Learning Setting in Higher Education
title_full_unstemmed Community of Inquiry on Facebook in a Formal Learning Setting in Higher Education
title_sort community of inquiry on facebook in a formal learning setting in higher education
publisher MDPI AG
series Education Sciences
issn 2227-7102
publishDate 2019-01-01
description This study demonstrates an application of Facebook for higher education in science (STEM), and it clarifies its impact on students’ learning in a formal online learning setting. A combined qualitative and quantitative approach was used. Messages posted on Facebook were classified by qualitative transcript analysis. The perception and experience of students with Facebook were recorded by means of pre- and post-tests, using a treatment/control group approach. The results show that an integral Community of Inquiry (CoI) was formed on Facebook within the regular online course, encompassing all relevant CoI interactions leading to a powerful educational experience. Additionally, a type of CoI interaction “student–community” is observed, which was not reported before. The results show that the use of Facebook had positive effects on students’ learning, only when the activities on Facebook were constructively integrated in a course design, and a moderator was present. More research is needed to include larger group sizes and other course designs.
topic higher education
online learning
Community of Inquiry
social networks
transcript analysis
students’ perception
url http://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/9/1/10
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