Abstract

<p>Online education increasingly puts emphasis on collaborative learning methods. Despite the pedagogical advantages of collaborative learning, online learners can perceive collaborative learning activities as frustrating experiences. The purpose of this study was to characterize the feelings of frustration as a negative emotion among online learners engaged in online computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL) experiences and, moreover, to identify the sources to which the learners attribute their frustration. With this aim, a questionnaire was designed to obtain data from a sample of online learners participating in the Master of ICT and Education program of the Universitat Oberta de Catalunya (UOC). Results revealed that frustration is a common feeling among students involved in online collaborative learning experiences. The perception of an asymmetric collaboration among the teammates was identified by the students as the most important source of frustration. Online learners also identified difficulties related to group organization, the lack of shared goals among the team members, the imbalance in the level of commitment and quality of the individual contributions, the excess time spent on the online CSCL tasks, the imbalance between the individual and collective grades, and difficulties in communication, among other factors leading to frustration. The analysis of the students’ sources of frustration in online CSCL is followed by a list of recommendations to the distance education stakeholders, aiming to reduce students’ frustration and improve the quality of their experiences in online CSCL contexts such as the UOC.</p>

Highlights

  • Online learning programs are growing at exponential rates (Allen & Seaman, 2007; Bishop & Spake, 2003; Kariya, 2003), and most of their participants are adult learners (Kuenzi, 2005)

  • Considering the relevance of the well-being of students during their online learning experience, this research aims to estimate the magnitude of the phenomenon of frustration among students involved in online computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL), with the sources of frustration being identified by the students themselves

  • The purpose of this study was to explore the phenomenon of frustration among students involved in online collaborative learning experiences

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Summary

Introduction

Online learning programs are growing at exponential rates (Allen & Seaman, 2007; Bishop & Spake, 2003; Kariya, 2003), and most of their participants are adult learners (Kuenzi, 2005). While early online programs focused mainly on the transmission and mastery of bodies of information, more emphasis has been placed on collaborative methods in recent years (Bruffee, 1999; Dirkx & Smith, 2004), examples of which are case studies, problem-based learning, and the development of learning communities in online contexts. According to Dirkx and Smith (2004), in theory, online collaborative activities could be considered as the key to this new learning paradigm. They stress that learners’ perceptions and experiences could generate a profound sense of ambivalence when learning and working in a group. Communication and interaction limitations caused by technology (Ragoonaden & Bordeleau, 2000; Ng, 2001) only serve to exacerbate these concerns, which become a channel for frustrations

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