Blogging: An Inquiry into The Efficacy of a Web-based Technology for Student Reflection in Community College Computer Science Programs

Reflection in learning is a pedagogical technique used to promote the higher order cognitive skills of analysis, synthesis, and evaluation that constitute the concept of critical thinking. To foster reflection in learning, the Internet technology of online journals known as blogs was employed in a t...

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Main Author: Perschbach, Jane W.
Format: Others
Published: NSUWorks 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/769
http://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1768&context=gscis_etd
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spelling ndltd-nova.edu-oai-nsuworks.nova.edu-gscis_etd-17682016-10-21T03:57:38Z Blogging: An Inquiry into The Efficacy of a Web-based Technology for Student Reflection in Community College Computer Science Programs Perschbach, Jane W. Reflection in learning is a pedagogical technique used to promote the higher order cognitive skills of analysis, synthesis, and evaluation that constitute the concept of critical thinking. To foster reflection in learning, the Internet technology of online journals known as blogs was employed in a two-semester, four-course investigation of the efficacy of this educational technology for vocational computer science students in a community college. The process involved an instructor-designed and maintained course blog containing suggestions for student reflection as well as hyperlinks to individual student peer blogs. Students were required to read both the course and peer blogs, and to contribute to a personal reflective blog. The methodology used for the research was an exploratory hybrid of quantitative and qualitative techniques using three instruments: a survey of student demographics, a reflective essay, and the body of blog postings. A content analysis of key words and phrases culled from the to stings and essays was computer generated. Descriptive statistical analysis of the frequency and duration of blogging evolved into an author defined classification of emergent student blogger types. The primary goal of the investigation was an exploration of any resultant evidence of student critical thinking and a subsequent evaluation of the emergent blogging technology in providing a mechanism for reflection. Paralleling the dual private and public nature of blogging, research by Henri (1991) and Garrison (2001 , 1992) benchmarked the collaborative or public nature of the technology while Bloom's taxonomy (1956) served as the standard for measuring individual critical thought. The results indicated that the uniqueness of blogging technology effectively recorded critical thinking and furthermore provided the learner with a personal voice that created a sense of ownership of ideas, active participation and empowerment in personal learning, and a contribution to the collaborative learning effort. Through the use of learner-centric critical reflection on experiential, explorative, and social learning events, learning changed from a passive, static accumulation of teacher-centric facts and skills to an engaged, dynamic comprehension of concepts by the learner. The exploratory investigation incorporated technology with learning as both an individual learning mechanism, and as a collaborative repository for course enrichment. 2006-01-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/769 http://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1768&context=gscis_etd CEC Theses and Dissertations NSUWorks Computer Sciences
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Computer Sciences
spellingShingle Computer Sciences
Perschbach, Jane W.
Blogging: An Inquiry into The Efficacy of a Web-based Technology for Student Reflection in Community College Computer Science Programs
description Reflection in learning is a pedagogical technique used to promote the higher order cognitive skills of analysis, synthesis, and evaluation that constitute the concept of critical thinking. To foster reflection in learning, the Internet technology of online journals known as blogs was employed in a two-semester, four-course investigation of the efficacy of this educational technology for vocational computer science students in a community college. The process involved an instructor-designed and maintained course blog containing suggestions for student reflection as well as hyperlinks to individual student peer blogs. Students were required to read both the course and peer blogs, and to contribute to a personal reflective blog. The methodology used for the research was an exploratory hybrid of quantitative and qualitative techniques using three instruments: a survey of student demographics, a reflective essay, and the body of blog postings. A content analysis of key words and phrases culled from the to stings and essays was computer generated. Descriptive statistical analysis of the frequency and duration of blogging evolved into an author defined classification of emergent student blogger types. The primary goal of the investigation was an exploration of any resultant evidence of student critical thinking and a subsequent evaluation of the emergent blogging technology in providing a mechanism for reflection. Paralleling the dual private and public nature of blogging, research by Henri (1991) and Garrison (2001 , 1992) benchmarked the collaborative or public nature of the technology while Bloom's taxonomy (1956) served as the standard for measuring individual critical thought. The results indicated that the uniqueness of blogging technology effectively recorded critical thinking and furthermore provided the learner with a personal voice that created a sense of ownership of ideas, active participation and empowerment in personal learning, and a contribution to the collaborative learning effort. Through the use of learner-centric critical reflection on experiential, explorative, and social learning events, learning changed from a passive, static accumulation of teacher-centric facts and skills to an engaged, dynamic comprehension of concepts by the learner. The exploratory investigation incorporated technology with learning as both an individual learning mechanism, and as a collaborative repository for course enrichment.
author Perschbach, Jane W.
author_facet Perschbach, Jane W.
author_sort Perschbach, Jane W.
title Blogging: An Inquiry into The Efficacy of a Web-based Technology for Student Reflection in Community College Computer Science Programs
title_short Blogging: An Inquiry into The Efficacy of a Web-based Technology for Student Reflection in Community College Computer Science Programs
title_full Blogging: An Inquiry into The Efficacy of a Web-based Technology for Student Reflection in Community College Computer Science Programs
title_fullStr Blogging: An Inquiry into The Efficacy of a Web-based Technology for Student Reflection in Community College Computer Science Programs
title_full_unstemmed Blogging: An Inquiry into The Efficacy of a Web-based Technology for Student Reflection in Community College Computer Science Programs
title_sort blogging: an inquiry into the efficacy of a web-based technology for student reflection in community college computer science programs
publisher NSUWorks
publishDate 2006
url http://nsuworks.nova.edu/gscis_etd/769
http://nsuworks.nova.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1768&context=gscis_etd
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