TY - JOUR
T1 - Relationships between Minority Students Online Learning Experiences and Academic Performance
AU - Kumi-Yeboah, Alex
AU - Smith, Patriann
N1 - You probably know that the Online Learning Consortium publishes a peer-reviewed scholarly journal called Online Learning (OLJ). But did you know that this journal is entering its 25th year of publication? First published in 1997 as the Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks (JALN), the journal changed names (and merged with MERLOT's Journal of Online Learning and Teaching) in 2014.
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - The study investigated the relationship between minority students' use of technology, social media, the number of online courses, program of study, satisfaction, and academic performance. Participants in the study were a diverse student body regarding age, gender, and educational level, and functioned at both undergraduate and graduate levels. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Chi-square tests were used to find the relationship between participants' online learning experiences and academic performance. Results showed that satisfaction and use of social media had no relationship with the academic performance of participants. However, a relationship existed between the use of technology, the number of courses in online, program of study, and academic performance. Categories that emerged from the open-ended questions were flexibility and time convenience, self-confidence, lack of support, self-regulated learning skills, and language and linguistic differences. The authors concluded that varying factors such as cultural, language, personal, and efficacy skills facilitated the academic performance of minority students in an online learning environment. This study reiterates the importance of establishing multicultural presence in an online course and suggests best pedagogical methods for teaching minority students in an online course.
AB - The study investigated the relationship between minority students' use of technology, social media, the number of online courses, program of study, satisfaction, and academic performance. Participants in the study were a diverse student body regarding age, gender, and educational level, and functioned at both undergraduate and graduate levels. Analysis of variance (ANOVA) and Chi-square tests were used to find the relationship between participants' online learning experiences and academic performance. Results showed that satisfaction and use of social media had no relationship with the academic performance of participants. However, a relationship existed between the use of technology, the number of courses in online, program of study, and academic performance. Categories that emerged from the open-ended questions were flexibility and time convenience, self-confidence, lack of support, self-regulated learning skills, and language and linguistic differences. The authors concluded that varying factors such as cultural, language, personal, and efficacy skills facilitated the academic performance of minority students in an online learning environment. This study reiterates the importance of establishing multicultural presence in an online course and suggests best pedagogical methods for teaching minority students in an online course.
UR - https://onlinelearningconsortium.org/read/olc-online-learning-journal/
M3 - Article
VL - 20
JO - OLC Online Learning Journal
JF - OLC Online Learning Journal
ER -