How accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? A measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an Online Information Systems masters program

In order to run a successful educational program, instructors as well as staff members must constantly review and adapt to the expectations, concerns, demographics and satisfaction level of their student consumers. This study was conducted in order to examine these issues in an online educational se...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lauren-Nicole Macht, Jenny Preece
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Association for Learning Technology 2002-12-01
Series:Research in Learning Technology
Online Access:http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/11412
id doaj-10c5d362a5344b2a80e8d14ea226760b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-10c5d362a5344b2a80e8d14ea226760b2020-11-25T01:49:46ZengAssociation for Learning Technology Research in Learning Technology2156-70692156-70772002-12-0110310.3402/rlt.v10i3.11412How accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? A measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an Online Information Systems masters programLauren-Nicole MachtJenny PreeceIn order to run a successful educational program, instructors as well as staff members must constantly review and adapt to the expectations, concerns, demographics and satisfaction level of their student consumers. This study was conducted in order to examine these issues in an online educational setting. First, interviews were given to the program instructors in order to determine their opinions about the students' expectations and satisfaction levels. This information was then used to create a student survey that assessed the students' expectations and level of satisfaction. These two sets of results were then compared This comparison revealed that the online instructors did have a good grasp of the online students' expectations, concerns, demographics and satisfaction level. The only areas where the instructors' concepts of student views were slightly less accurate was student concerns and student feelings about the program administration, where the instructors overestimated the level of concern the students had about successfully returning to the learning environment and underestimated the students' satisfaction with the program's administration. This leads us to conclude that, even with the added online factor, instructors strongly understand student expectations, satisfaction levels, demographics and concerns.http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/11412
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lauren-Nicole Macht
Jenny Preece
spellingShingle Lauren-Nicole Macht
Jenny Preece
How accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? A measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an Online Information Systems masters program
Research in Learning Technology
author_facet Lauren-Nicole Macht
Jenny Preece
author_sort Lauren-Nicole Macht
title How accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? A measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an Online Information Systems masters program
title_short How accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? A measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an Online Information Systems masters program
title_full How accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? A measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an Online Information Systems masters program
title_fullStr How accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? A measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an Online Information Systems masters program
title_full_unstemmed How accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? A measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an Online Information Systems masters program
title_sort how accurately do instructors judge students' attitudes online? a measurement of expectations and level of satisfaction with an online information systems masters program
publisher Association for Learning Technology
series Research in Learning Technology
issn 2156-7069
2156-7077
publishDate 2002-12-01
description In order to run a successful educational program, instructors as well as staff members must constantly review and adapt to the expectations, concerns, demographics and satisfaction level of their student consumers. This study was conducted in order to examine these issues in an online educational setting. First, interviews were given to the program instructors in order to determine their opinions about the students' expectations and satisfaction levels. This information was then used to create a student survey that assessed the students' expectations and level of satisfaction. These two sets of results were then compared This comparison revealed that the online instructors did have a good grasp of the online students' expectations, concerns, demographics and satisfaction level. The only areas where the instructors' concepts of student views were slightly less accurate was student concerns and student feelings about the program administration, where the instructors overestimated the level of concern the students had about successfully returning to the learning environment and underestimated the students' satisfaction with the program's administration. This leads us to conclude that, even with the added online factor, instructors strongly understand student expectations, satisfaction levels, demographics and concerns.
url http://www.researchinlearningtechnology.net/index.php/rlt/article/view/11412
work_keys_str_mv AT laurennicolemacht howaccuratelydoinstructorsjudgestudentsattitudesonlineameasurementofexpectationsandlevelofsatisfactionwithanonlineinformationsystemsmastersprogram
AT jennypreece howaccuratelydoinstructorsjudgestudentsattitudesonlineameasurementofexpectationsandlevelofsatisfactionwithanonlineinformationsystemsmastersprogram
_version_ 1725005086904549376