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Olalekan T. Adepoju – Writing Center Journal, 2024
This study explores the discursive practices the researcher utilizes during recurring asynchronous writing consultations to engender mutually adjusted and context-driven interactions meaningful to writers' development during virtual tutoring. While earlier studies have critiqued asynchronous tutoring for its inability to efficiently promote the…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Discourse Analysis
Shannon McClellan Brooks – Writing Center Journal, 2024
This critical self-reflection is not a success story; rather, it is an effort of decolonial thinking that reckons with the idea, experience, and practice of centerlessness during pandemic-induced online transitions and operations in a graduate writing center (GWC). By tracing the contours of a series of interlocking disruptions the author and her…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Decolonization, Electronic Learning
Shea E. Carr – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Motivation, belonging, and inclusion are all critical factors for student success but can be difficult to support in asynchronous online courses. Active learning and required group work have been shown to increase student motivation in in-person and synchronous online courses, but little is known about their impact in online asynchronous settings.…
Descriptors: Electronic Learning, Asynchronous Communication, Active Learning, Group Dynamics
Susan Lang; Clinton Morrison Jr.; Kathleen Brawley – Writing Center Journal, 2024
What do writers do with the feedback they receive? While the answer will vary depending on the writer's experience and the rhetorical situation, understanding what writers do can provide important information for course redesign and professional development of tutors and instructors. In this first of two manuscripts, the authors examine how…
Descriptors: Laboratories, Writing (Composition), Writing Instruction, Tutoring
Cari Din; Martin MacInnis – Papers on Postsecondary Learning and Teaching, 2024
As part of a large exercise physiology laboratory (lab) reform project, we used blended learning to support graduate teaching assistants and lab technicians in developing their pedagogical knowledge and create an entry point to reflective conversations about teaching and learning. Because self-paced asynchronous online modules can enable…
Descriptors: Blended Learning, Exercise Physiology, Laboratories, Educational Change
Shea E. Carr; Thad E. Wilson; Stacey A. Slone; Leila W. Karanja; Jennifer L. Osterhage – Advances in Physiology Education, 2024
With the rise of online instruction, a better understanding of the factors that contribute to belonging and motivation in these contexts is essential to creating optimal learning environments. Although group work is known to be beneficial to student success, few studies have investigated its role in the context of asynchronous online courses. The…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Group Activities, Student Motivation, Cooperative Learning
Yunfei Hou; Amir Ghasemkhani; Hani Aldirawi; Miranda McIntyre; Montgomery Van Wart – American Journal of Distance Education, 2024
Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, Computer Science and STEM-related fields were among the most resistant to online courses. This is because of a perception of the need for more hands-on instruction with labs, clinicals, field studies, etc. Additionally, many STEM students had perceptions based on limited experience of an online STEM course.…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Student Attitudes, Attitude Change, Electronic Learning