Online and out of synch: Using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussions

We completed a qualitative study focusing on our students’ use of Discussion Roles in our general and entry level online classes and presented the information at a Brown Bag presentation for University of Phoenix instructors and staff in October 2016. The following contains the results of the study...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Cheryl Hancock, Barbara Rowland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2017-01-01
Series:Cogent Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2017.1368613
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spelling doaj-c88434ef7e0e47f4bccd4ddb29720de02021-07-15T13:10:35ZengTaylor & Francis GroupCogent Education2331-186X2017-01-014110.1080/2331186X.2017.13686131368613Online and out of synch: Using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussionsCheryl Hancock0Barbara Rowland1The University of PhoenixThe University of PhoenixWe completed a qualitative study focusing on our students’ use of Discussion Roles in our general and entry level online classes and presented the information at a Brown Bag presentation for University of Phoenix instructors and staff in October 2016. The following contains the results of the study including: (1) ways to use Discussion Roles in class discussions without assigning them, (2) ways to encourage students’ use of Discussion Roles, (3) how students reacted to using Discussion Roles, (4) results of students’ use of Discussion Roles, and (5) How instructors’ future use of Discussion Roles can help adult students acclimate to asynchronous, online discussion. Discussion Roles provide scaffolding that helps students create written responses that reflect higher level thinking. Implications for improving practice relate to asynchronous discussion, students’ use of higher level thinking skills, and instructors encouraging students’ use of Discussion Roles. Finally, ideas for new types of Discussion Roles led the researchers to suggest further study of Discussion Roles and how they can be used by students to take control of their learning and maximize the benefits of asynchronous discussion.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2017.1368613asynchronousonline discussiondiscussion rolesscaffoldingrolesnontraditional adult studenthigher level thinking
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Cheryl Hancock
Barbara Rowland
spellingShingle Cheryl Hancock
Barbara Rowland
Online and out of synch: Using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussions
Cogent Education
asynchronous
online discussion
discussion roles
scaffolding
roles
nontraditional adult student
higher level thinking
author_facet Cheryl Hancock
Barbara Rowland
author_sort Cheryl Hancock
title Online and out of synch: Using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussions
title_short Online and out of synch: Using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussions
title_full Online and out of synch: Using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussions
title_fullStr Online and out of synch: Using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussions
title_full_unstemmed Online and out of synch: Using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussions
title_sort online and out of synch: using discussion roles in online asynchronous discussions
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Cogent Education
issn 2331-186X
publishDate 2017-01-01
description We completed a qualitative study focusing on our students’ use of Discussion Roles in our general and entry level online classes and presented the information at a Brown Bag presentation for University of Phoenix instructors and staff in October 2016. The following contains the results of the study including: (1) ways to use Discussion Roles in class discussions without assigning them, (2) ways to encourage students’ use of Discussion Roles, (3) how students reacted to using Discussion Roles, (4) results of students’ use of Discussion Roles, and (5) How instructors’ future use of Discussion Roles can help adult students acclimate to asynchronous, online discussion. Discussion Roles provide scaffolding that helps students create written responses that reflect higher level thinking. Implications for improving practice relate to asynchronous discussion, students’ use of higher level thinking skills, and instructors encouraging students’ use of Discussion Roles. Finally, ideas for new types of Discussion Roles led the researchers to suggest further study of Discussion Roles and how they can be used by students to take control of their learning and maximize the benefits of asynchronous discussion.
topic asynchronous
online discussion
discussion roles
scaffolding
roles
nontraditional adult student
higher level thinking
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/2331186X.2017.1368613
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