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Self-regulated learning in virtual communities
Delfino, M., Dettori, G. & Persico, D. (2008). Self-regulated learning in virtual communities. Technology, Pedagogy and Education, 17(3), 195-205.
Presenter: Zong-Lin TsaiAdvisor: Ming-Puu Chen
Date: July 1, 2009
Introduction
Boekaerts, Pintrich, and Zeidner (2000) argue that a lack of social learning experiences is the first important source of self-regulatory dysfunctions.
Virtual Learning Communities (VLCs), and in general Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL), appear to be a good way to reconcile individualisation and collaboration.
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Introduction
Having room for individual movement, however, does not necessarily mean being able to make good use of it. In order to take advantage of their liberty, learners need to be able to suitably manage their own learning process. Make plans on how to proceed; Enacting those plans; Monitoring their fulfillment; Checking the quality of the work done.
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Introduction
Carrying out such activities entails the adaptive reuse of knowledge and strategies previously learned in other contexts as well as the ability to evaluate and improve one’s own outcomes, without an explicit guide from some external mentor. In other words, learners must be able to self-regulate their activity, at least to some extent.
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Method
The course lasted 12 weeks and involved 95 students and seven tutors who exchanged, in total, 7605 messages. Activity 1 consisted of a role-play scenario, where
students were requested to take on the role of strongly characterised teachers and to discuss strengths and weaknesses of a WebQuest from such different points of view.
Activity 2 was a case study on school-based learning communities. Trainees were asked to discuss assets and flaws in a school project recently carried out by a small group of teachers with their classes, based on the documentation provided.
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Method
Preliminary hypotheses: The trainees increased their self-regulation while
progressing throughout the course, from Activity 1 to Activity 2;
Social indicators were more frequent than individual indicators, regardless of the activities;
Cognitive/metacognitive indicators were more frequent than emotional/motivational ones;
Activity 1 entailed less planning than Activity 2 because of the nature of the task assigned.
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Findings
The hypothesis formulated based on those data was that students were learning to participate and to self-regulate. The new data lead us to discard that hypothesis.
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Based on this reflection, a well-structured, constructivist online course appears to be a good opportunity to practice SRL in collaboration with peers but probably does not significantly increase the ability to self-regulate, at least over a short period of time.
Findings
One reason is that VLCs tend to favor the social aspects of SRL more than its individual aspects, especially when the assigned task is groupwork.
The second explanation is that, when writing messages in online collaborative environments, students are more likely to deal with matters concerning the group rather than themselves as individuals.
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Findings
The considered activities were content-based ones, in which students were assigned specific tasks, entailing collaboration on content-related themes, concepts and ideas.
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Findings
We note that the evaluation clues have more or less the same frequency in the two activities, while planning is more frequent in Activity 2 and monitoring in Activity 1.
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We can therefore repeat here the same reflections made concerning the total number of SRL indicators: there does not seem to be a direct influence of the task assigned on the different phases of SRL.
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