Ed/IT Lib Educational & Information Technology Library
Sponsored by AACE
Library Home | Journals | Conference Papers | Subjects | Collections | Forums | Alerts | My Profile
Search:

Beyond Threaded Discourse

New Search
New Search
Print Abstract
Print Abstract
E-mail Abstract
E-mail Abstract
Full Text
Full Text
Add To Collection
Save to My Collections
Export Citation
Export Citation
Related Papers
Related Papers

Hewitt, J. (2001). Beyond Threaded Discourse. International Journal of Educational Telecommunications. 7 (3), pp. 207-221. Norfolk, VA: AACE.


Journal Information

IJET

International Journal of Educational Telecommunications
ISSN 1077-9124
Volume 7, Issue 3, 2001
AACE  Norfolk, VA

More Information on IJET
Table of Contents


Author

James Hewitt, University of Toronto, Canada

Abstract

The educational potential of asynchronous, computer-mediated conferencing is well documented. Opportunities for increased group interaction, more equitable communication patterns, higher degrees of reflection, and time-and-place-independent discussions are some of the benefits cited by researchers. This article focuses on one of the apparent limitations of the medium: the lack of support for convergent processes. Threaded online environments support electronic conversations that expand and branch, but provide few facilities for drawing together discourse in meaningful ways. The implications of this restriction are explored in two studies. The first study analyzes the degree to which students and instructors write convergent notes (e.g., notes that synthesize or summarize ideas) in three graduate-level computer conferencing courses. The second study explores student perceptions relating to their own synthesizing and summarizing practices. The results suggest that online participants rarely engage in convergent processes in spite of widespread agreement that such efforts confer educational benefits. Possible explanations for this phenomenon are discussed.

Tags

Keywords

Comments & Discussion

Comment on the paper above. You must be registered to participate. Registration is free.

 
  

For questions, comments, or subscription issues, please e-mail info@aace.org.
If you encounter technical problems, please e-mail jordanthecoder@gmail.com.

Ed/ITLib Home | Feedback <info@editlib.org> | Privacy Policy

Ed/ITLib is sponsored by the Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education
P.O. Box 1545, Chesapeake, VA 23327-1545 USA   757-366-5606