Abstract

Completing a regulated education in a specific area is no guarantee of getting a job or, for that matter, of achieving job security. In view of this situation, adults choose to carry on learning. This article analyses participation in higher-education lifelong learning courses entirely undertaken in virtual learning environments (VLEs). The aim is to establish which aspects of the communication process add quality to online courses. The sample consists of four lifelong learning courses published on WebCT for graduates in general and teachers/lecturers at various educational levels in particular, whose goal is to further their academic training in order to specialise in a specific field. The research combines both qualitative and quantitative approaches. Two main tools were used to gather data: the WebCT “Track Students” tool and the communication tool. The results show that quality in the communication processes of online courses has a direct impact on student participation in online teaching-learning processes. Dealing with students in a personalised manner, designing communication tools that take account of the needs of academic disciplines and of users, offering a variety of discussion topics, coordinating them and directing them in a responsible, effective manner, and offering quick, smooth interaction are some of the intervening variables.

Highlights

  • – To study participation and the use that lecturers and students make of communication tools in online lifelong learning courses at University of Distance Education (UNED) published on the WebCT platform

  • – To analyse communication tools used, and their use by lecturers on online courses. – To perform a comparative study between online courses, taking account of recorded participation and the use of communication tools integrated into the courses. – To analyse the impact of the methodology used for communication tools on student and lecturer participation in online courses

  • The study on the number of times students accessed the virtual learning environments (VLEs) showed a clear difference between online course 1 and the rest of the courses

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Summary

Higher-Education Lifelong Learning in the Knowledge Society

Paul Belanger, the director of the UNESCO Institute, considers that lifelong learning became especially important in the 1970s as a result of economic growth and a rise in confidence levels. In the European context, reference should be made to the Bologna Declaration (1999), which laid the foundations for the unified development of the European Higher Education Area (EHEA) by 2010. Lifelong learning within the Bologna Declaration framework is enhanced by aspects such as student and teacher/lecturer mobility, inclusion in the European labour market, international competition and obtaining recognised accreditation and qualifications outside the higher-education system. Completing a regulated education in a specific area is no guarantee of getting a job or, for that matter, of achieving job security. In view of this situation, adults choose to carry on learning in order to develop their CVs

The Online Learning Process
WebCT Platform
Objectives
Design and Methodology
Design
Description of Research Phases
Study of Participation in Online Courses
Qualitative Study of Communication Tool Use
Conclusions
Full Text
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