Designing Holistic and Multivoiced Online Learning: Higher Education Actors’ Pedagogical Decisions and Perspectives
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- What are the pedagogical decisions educators and digital learning professionals make when designing for credit-bearing online learning and the rationale behind them?
2. Literature Review
2.1. Conceptual Framings: Towards Ecological and Postdigital Perspectives
2.2. Empirical Perspectives of Online Learning Practices
3. Methodology and Methods
3.1. Participants
3.2. Data Collection and Analysis
4. Findings
4.1. Embracing a Multi-Level View of Student Learning Journeys
4.1.1. Crafting Module-Level Narrative Threads
‘The online experience made it really clear for me that I need to improve and create my content with a story flow…It’s like a movie. There is a bigger plot that you need to tell the student. And you need to give the series, like from week one that could be another inner story in the big one, but it should connect at the bigger part in the end…It is better for students to learn in this way, instead of providing separate contents.’(Mark)
‘We built the structure of the learning around how they [students] would actually build and deliver a campaign in the real-world so they could see the step-by-step processes they had to go through. I believe the best teaching is when you’re using a story, a kind of journey you’re taking students through.’(Oliver)
‘Before there was no overall picture of why you need to learn all these things. Now the way the module is structured, overall, has two large examples. I’ve chosen what I think are quite motivating examples and that I hope that they will enjoy working on those and understand how a bigger programme is written.’(John)
4.1.2. Adopting an Integrated Approach to Activities’ Design and Assessments
‘The first thing is for them to get themselves into a place where they think about how they would respond intuitively if someone disclosed something, or they noticed something. Then, I give them the principles of how to respond and then, to get them to re-reflect on it if they change any of their behaviour. So, it’s that sort of iteration of thinking.’(Maria)
‘We have become far more varied. So, there is always going to be lots of opinion-based tasks, controversial questions, posing a big question, trying to make them think honestly and critically. There will be other steps where we have this list of resources, we are giving you the choice to select one of them, but you must go away and critique and analyse and come back with your responses to this question. In other instances, it will be, thinking about your own discipline, we would like you to go away and investigate xyz, or talk to someone or do an interview, or take an image and post that.’(Anna)
‘…a simulation task that we embedded throughout… We wanted to give them the option to see how it will be like to do the research, to prepare the documentation, to have to defend it in front of a panel. So, we had to have it more closely aligned and tied in with everything to support them to do that.’(Anna)
4.1.3. Considering the ‘Degree’ Learning Journey
‘In terms of the whole programme design, the core modules build the foundations for the optional modules that come next. There’s a real overarching design in how things are arranged so that they speak to each other.’(Maria)
4.2. Embedding Multiple and Diverse ‘Voices’
‘We’ve gone off and interviewed, grant making bodies, editors of key journals, brand managers […] We’ve involved the ethics office, the research coordination office at our institution, and the graduate school who came and did some videos and developed some materials around grant applications and things like that. We’ve worked with the patient experience research group at our institution to do patient and public participation materials. We invite previous students to come in to present their work.’(Ethan)
‘Instead of just providing all the American or European examples, we are now trying to enrich it and provide more inclusive examples and cases from different parts of the world. And it’s really important for our programme because more than half of people are coming from Asia or the Middle East.’(Mark)
4.3. Creating a Complex Web of Social Learning Opportunities and ‘Spaces’
‘I really wanted to create a culture which was mutually supportive and there was some peer support…Part of that two hours, we’ll have different discussion activities, because they will want to create an informal cafe culture space within the online environment. It’s community building. It’s checking in with information, but I want very strongly that to be understanding that this is available, and they can talk to each other about their concerns, interests and passion for Mental Health.’(Maria)
- Constant group work: the online module included a substantial group formative assessment, requiring students to work within assigned groups throughout the module. Each week, these groups had to engage with smaller tasks, ultimately contributing to a cohesive project by the module’s end.
- Diverse discussion and group-based activities where learners could exchange their perspectives with other peers at a cohort-level synchronously and asynchronously.
- Interactions with professional communities and networks that were external to the online module both within the UK and globally.
‘…making sure that learning is taking place across the entire cohort. So, it is not all about their group work, they will be paired and teamed up with different partners to get that fresh perspective, that different discipline perspective, experience…Also, asking them to talk to people outside of this environment online, to access other networks and they can actually spread that knowledge around’.(Anna)
‘If they would like to come together as a group face-to-face, great, or in a coffee house. Or if they wanna book a room at the university’s library or get together at somebody’s home, that’s up to them. If they wanna keep this virtual, or use SharePoint, you know, a collaborative space, that is entirely up to them’.(Anna)
‘…there are some informal spaces, the sort of discussion page, the more seminar-based spaces. But I also have made a huge effort to think about the online environment and its feel and the online community.’(Maria)
‘I always encourage them to read other people’s comments and learn from them […] and actually, instead of replying like an authority figure, I just let them discuss among them or let them share their expertise.’.(Mark)
5. Discussion
5.1. Connections through Narrative Threads
5.2. Connections between the Module and the Degree Experience
5.3. Seamless Connection between Assessment and the Module Learning Journey
5.4. Connections with People across Diverse Spaces: Multivoiced Learning and Educators’ Multifaceted Roles
6. Conclusions
Contextual Reflections and Future Research Directions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Indicative Questions Included in the Interview and Observation Protocols
- Indicative interview questions
- -
- Can you describe how you designed this online module?
- -
- What were the key considerations you made when designing this online module?
- -
- What are the key learning activities you designed in this online module? Why?
- -
- How do you assess students in this module, and what led you to choosing these assessment methods?
- -
- What will be your role and interactions with your students based on this online module’s design?
- -
- How did your previous experience in on-campus teaching inform, if at all, the way you designed this online module? What were the module components that you re-used (if at all), and why?
- -
- How did you perceive the roles of the different stakeholders involved in this online module’s design?
- Indicative areas of attention used in the non-participant observation of team design meetings
- -
- What are the participants’ orientations in relation to pedagogies in an online context? What is the object of their shared design activity?
- -
- What specific considerations are raised regarding the online module’s structure, sequencing and types of activities, content presentation, social interaction opportunities (student–student, student–educator, student–other stakeholders), assessment, feedback, and technology use?
- -
- How do participants justify their suggestions and decisions, if at all? What informs their proposed ideas or decisions?
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Case Study | Pseudonym | Participant Role | On-Campus Teaching Experience | Online Learning Design and/or Teaching Experience | Disciplinary Cluster and Area of the Online Module | University Type |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Anna | Module leader | 6–10 years | 1 year | Social Sciences (Education) | Teaching-focused |
Alex | Media producer | 11–15 years | 3 years | |||
2 | John | Module leader and degree director | 11–15 years | 0–1 years | STEM (Computing) | Research-intensive |
3 | Maria | Module leader and degree co-director | 6–10 years | 1st time | Health and Social Care (Social Policy) | Research-intensive |
Alicia | Module co-leader | 6–10 years | 1st time | |||
Matteo | Learning designer | n/a | 4 years | |||
Harry | Learning technologist | n/a | 4 years | |||
4 | Mark | Module leader and deputy degree director | 0–5 years | 0–1 years | Social Sciences (Business) | Research-intensive |
Nancy | Learning designer | n/a | 6 years | |||
5 | Oliver | Module leader | 6–10 years | 0–1 years | Social Sciences (Business) | Research-intensive |
Nadia | Learning designer | n/a | 2–3 years | |||
6 | Leonardo | Module leader and degree director | 11–15 years | 0–1 years | Health and Social Care (Medicine) | Research-intensive |
Valeria | Co-module leader | 0–5 years | 0–1 years | |||
Karen | Learning technologist | n/a | 10 years | |||
7 | Ethan | Module leader | 0–5 years | 1 year | Health and Social Care (Medicine) | Research-intensive (same university as in case 5) |
Florence | Module contributor | 0–5 years | 1 year | |||
Sophia | Learning designer | 6–10 years | 3 years |
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Papageorgiou, V.; Meyer, E.; Ntonia, I. Designing Holistic and Multivoiced Online Learning: Higher Education Actors’ Pedagogical Decisions and Perspectives. Educ. Sci. 2024, 14, 504. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14050504
Papageorgiou V, Meyer E, Ntonia I. Designing Holistic and Multivoiced Online Learning: Higher Education Actors’ Pedagogical Decisions and Perspectives. Education Sciences. 2024; 14(5):504. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14050504
Chicago/Turabian StylePapageorgiou, Vasiliki, Edgar Meyer, and Iro Ntonia. 2024. "Designing Holistic and Multivoiced Online Learning: Higher Education Actors’ Pedagogical Decisions and Perspectives" Education Sciences 14, no. 5: 504. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14050504
APA StylePapageorgiou, V., Meyer, E., & Ntonia, I. (2024). Designing Holistic and Multivoiced Online Learning: Higher Education Actors’ Pedagogical Decisions and Perspectives. Education Sciences, 14(5), 504. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14050504