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Jingwen Wang; Xiaohong Yang; Dujuan Liu – International Journal of Web-Based Learning and Teaching Technologies, 2024
The large scale expansion of online courses has led to the crisis of course quality issues. In this study, we first established an evaluation index system for online courses using factor analysis, encompassing three key constructs: course resource construction, course implementation, and teaching effectiveness. Subsequently, we employed factor…
Descriptors: Educational Quality, Online Courses, Course Evaluation, Models
George Kinnear – Research in Mathematics Education, 2024
Prompting learners to generate examples has been proposed as an effective way of developing understanding of a new concept. However, empirical support for this approach is lacking. This article presents two empirical studies on the use of example-generation tasks in an online course in introductory university mathematics. The first study compares…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Classification, Task Analysis, Mathematics Instruction
Laura A. Meadows; Max Bernard; Kaela Clabaugh-Howell; Jessica Duke; Lani Irvin; Lydia Mayo; Emily A. Holt – College Teaching, 2024
Learner-centered and inclusive and equitable teaching practices aim to promote better learning outcomes for all students. Course syllabi can provide a window into these practices. We adapted an existing rubric to measure inclusiveness and equity-mindedness of syllabi and used an established rubric to assess their learner-centeredness. We then…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Biology, Introductory Courses, Science Instruction
Sunny Harris Rome – Journal of Social Work Education, 2024
Elections have become the new battleground for democracy and civil rights. Yet few social work programs provide opportunities for students to gain competency in electoral politics and voter engagement. This article describes an elective course for Master of Social Work students offered in the runup to the 2018 and 2020 elections. Using classroom…
Descriptors: Social Work, Counselor Training, Democracy, Civil Rights
Susan A. Marsh – Advances in Physiology Education, 2024
Pharmacists are increasingly becoming the healthcare professional who interacts most regularly with patients who have diseases or disorders for which exercise is an effective and recommended treatment. With the relative scarcity of clinical exercise physiologists in the United States, pharmacists are expected to provide lifestyle advice to their…
Descriptors: Pharmaceutical Education, Physical Activities, Pharmacy, Physician Patient Relationship
Greg Gaynor; Kevin T. Wynne; Ting Zhang; Daniel Gerlowski; Joel N. Morse – Journal of Economic Education, 2024
The authors of this article examine the effect of online proctoring on exam scores with samples of proctored and unproctored students in an upper-level economics class. They document a proctoring discount (i.e., the tendency for lower scores on proctored exams versus on unproctored exams) and a relationship with students' perceptions measured by…
Descriptors: Computer Assisted Testing, Stress Variables, Economics Education, Online Courses
Yuzhen Wang; Ruifeng Yu; Xin Wu; Zhenhua Chen; Yonghao Huang – Education and Information Technologies, 2025
The relationship between individual personality types and academic performance during online learning remains poorly understood. This study analysed extensive sampling data from 4,340 first-year high school students during semesters of face-to-face and online learning, respectively, to investigate the influence of students' Myers-Briggs Type…
Descriptors: Personality Traits, Academic Achievement, Online Courses, High School Freshmen
Chen Zong; Suzann M. Koller – Association for Institutional Research, 2025
Understanding the relationship between high-risk courses and Fall-to-Fall retention is essential to enhance student persistence and academic achievement in higher education institutions. The purpose of this study is to examine the relationship between high-risk courses and Fall-to-Fall retention of first-time, full-time students. The course data…
Descriptors: College Students, Course Selection (Students), Courses, Risk
Tal Samuel-Azran; Shira Goldberg; Tsahi Hayat; Yair Amichai-Hamburger – SAGE Open, 2025
Social factors, including social ties (the extent to which students form social ties with other students in the course) and social capital (the resources which are accessed through our social networks), have been acknowledged as important predictors of learning outcomes. Furthermore, they may be particularly important in online distance learning…
Descriptors: Social Capital, Electronic Learning, Online Courses, Student Satisfaction
Michael Hubbard MacKay; Jason McDonald; Andrew C. Reed – Studies in Philosophy and Education, 2025
Online and blended learning (OBL) overemphasize the process of creating artifacts, producing strategies, or otherwise utilizing a "making" orientation in education. As an alternative to this making-orientation, we offer a model for relational course design founded in the philosophies of Emmanuel Levinas and Martin Buber. We examine an…
Descriptors: Ethics, Correlation, Teaching Methods, Instructional Design
Zui Cheng; Zhuo Zhang; Qian Xu; Yukiko Maeda; Peidi Gu – Journal of Computing in Higher Education, 2025
Research on academic performance in online education proliferated in the last decade; however, our current understanding of the relationship between self-regulated learning and academic performance in online learning environments remains scattered. This meta-analysis provides a holistic view of the relationship between learners' use of…
Descriptors: Meta Analysis, Independent Study, Learning Strategies, Academic Achievement
Mary L. Power – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The purpose of this quantitative, correlational study was to determine if and to what extent a correlation exists between the stress and resilience of graduate students enrolled in an online master's degree program and their intent to persist at a large university in New England. The theoretical foundation for this study was the metatheory of…
Descriptors: Online Courses, Graduate Students, Anxiety, Resilience (Psychology)
Anita Carol Swayze – ProQuest LLC, 2024
During the past several years, the federal and state governments have adopted a college completion agenda using graduation rates as evidence of student success. With the demand for increased accountability on colleges and universities to ensure student success, institutions of higher education are searching for more effective ways to help students…
Descriptors: Experiential Learning, Graduation Rate, Courses, Public Colleges
Ahrong Beik – Asia Pacific Education Review, 2025
This study aims to compare the influence of learners' self-regulation and sense of presence on online learning. Due to the increasing influence of online learning, self-regulation has received considerable attention. However, it is also claimed that an increased sense of presence can enhance online learning effects. For comparison, a meta-analysis…
Descriptors: Metacognition, Online Courses, Learning Strategies, Comparative Analysis
Maryrose Weatherton; Elisabeth E. Schussler; Jennifer R. Brigati; Hope Ferguson; Isabel Boyd; Benjamin J. England – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2024
High levels of student anxiety are negatively related to degree persistence, academic achievement, and student perceptions of instructor support. Anxiety levels vary along many axes--among classes, within students in the same class, and over time--creating a dynamic emotional landscape in classrooms. In this study, we examined the relationship…
Descriptors: Anxiety, Teacher Role, Teacher Influence, Correlation