Book Chapters
The greater the online participation, the better the learning achievement? A study of integrating Moodle into learning
- The greater the online participation, the better the learning achievement? A study of integrating Moodle into learning
- Technology in education: Transforming educational practices with technology
- Berlin
- Springer Berlin Heidelberg
- 2015
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Post-Secondary Education
- This study aimed to explore the relationship between students’ online participation in Moodle and their learning achievement. Participants in the study were 78 undergraduate full-time students who were enrolled in a general education course entitled “Digital Citizenship” at a higher education institute in Hong Kong. They were required to choose from and participate in different types of Moodle activities including information access (e.g., reading online supplementary resources), interactive learning (e.g., running online simulations), networked learning (e.g., discussing in online forums), and materials development (e.g., writing reflective journals). The online participation of a student was measured by the number of completed activities, while the learning achievement of a student was determined by his/her essay grade. This study applied the Partial Least Squares (PLS) method to the collected data in order to identify whether there was a link between online participation and learning achievement. The results indicate that online participation in networked learning or in materials development, but not in information access nor in interactive learning, was positively and significantly related to learning achievement. This finding highlights the importance of social interaction and individual constructivism for effective online learning.[Copyright © 2015 Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg.]
-
- English
- Book Chapters
-
- 9783662461570
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/d4d4a7a1
- 2015-06-23
Recent Book Chapters
Architecture of health: Hygiene and schooling in Hong Kong, 1901–1941Book Chapters
Differences in the relationships between executive functions, reading engagement, and reading comprehension between primary students from Grade 3 and Grade 5Book Chapters
Life and moral education and Chinese language education: Trends and prospects in the Greater China RegionBook Chapters
Transprofessional identity of L1 Chinese language teachers in changing multilingual contextsBook Chapters
A review of the development of language teaching and learning in Hong Kong in the past 50 yearsBook Chapters
Perceptions of motivational strategies among pre-service Chinese language teachersBook Chapters
Innovative practices of teaching classical Chinese vocabulary: From etymology to semantic systemBook Chapters
Computational thinking education in Hong KongBook Chapters