Abstract

The capacity to foster interpersonal interactions in massive open online courses (MOOCs) has frequently been contested, particularly when learner interactions are limited to MOOC forums. The establishment of social presence—a perceived sense of somebody being present and “real”—is among the strategies to tackle the challenges of online learning and could be applied in MOOCs. Thus far, social presence in MOOCs has been under-researched. Studies that previously examined social presence in MOOCs did not account for the peculiar nature of open online learning. In contrast to the existing work, this study seeks to understand how learners perceive social presence, and the different nuances of social presence in diverse MOOC populations. In particular, we compare perceptions of social presence across the groups of learners with different patterns of forum participation in three edX MOOCs. The findings reveal substantial differences in how learners with varying forum activity perceive social presence. Perceptions of social presence also differed in courses with the varying volume of forum interaction and duration. Finally, learners with sustained forum activity generally reported higher social presence scores that included low affectivity and strong group cohesion perceptions. With this in mind, this study is significant because of the insights into brings to the current body of knowledge around social presence in MOOCs. The study’s findings also raise questions about the effectiveness of transferring existing socio-constructivist constructs into the MOOC contexts.

Highlights

  • IntroductionWith the steady expansion of online education, the numbers of students enrolling in scaled open courses (e.g., massive open online courses [MOOCs]) worldwide have reached beyond millions (Shah, 2015)

  • With the steady expansion of online education, the numbers of students enrolling in scaled open courses worldwide have reached beyond millions (Shah, 2015)

  • We argued that massive open online courses (MOOCs) discussion forums do not possess the interaction dynamics of the formal, small-scale online courses, and that researchers need to account for the differences between these two contexts carefully

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Summary

Introduction

With the steady expansion of online education, the numbers of students enrolling in scaled open courses (e.g., massive open online courses [MOOCs]) worldwide have reached beyond millions (Shah, 2015) Such an explosion in student numbers obviously has implications for the design of education at scale and its capacity to promote and facilitate peer interactions. The dynamics of MOOCs creates a challenging environment for stimulating and fostering peer interactions (Daniel, 2012). This is due to the unprecedented volume of communication, often at a scale several orders of magnitude larger than in formal courses. As the learners are not obliged to engage in social activities or complete the assigned assessment in the course, they exhibit varying patterns of use when it comes to the course resources (Bergner, Kerr, & Pritchard, 2015; Eynon, Gillani, Hjorth, & Yasseri, 2014)

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