“Comfort” as a Critical Success Factor in Blended Learning Courses

Authors

  • Linda S Futch University of Central Florida
  • Aimee deNoyelles University of Central Florida
  • Kelvin Thompson University of Central Florida
  • Wendy Howard University of Central Florida

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24059/olj.v20i3.978

Keywords:

Blended learning, pedagogy, online best practices, blended best practices

Abstract

There are substantial quantitative research and anecdotal reports on blended learning and blended learning courses. However, few research studies focus on what happens at the classroom level. This research study aims to consider the highly contextual environment of effective blended learning courses by identifying the strategies instructors use to unify the face-to-face and online components of their courses to support student success. Using a case study model, interviews were conducted with three community college instructors who were identified as exemplary teachers of blended learning courses in their institutions. The research questions explored in this article are: (R1) What are exemplary community college teachers’ perceived obstacles to student success in blended courses? and (R2) What solutions or strategies do exemplary community college teachers employ to overcome perceived obstacles to student success in blended courses? The interviews were analyzed by the researchers to identify descriptive themes and sub-themes related to student success. It was found that “comfort” emerged as a mediating factor for student success, with “organization,” “communication,” and “support” acting as supporting themes. These findings will be reported as pedagogical strategies and scalable best practices for the design of blended courses that promote student success.

Author Biographies

Linda S Futch, University of Central Florida

Dr. Linda S. Futch is a Department Head, Course Design and Delivery, with the Center for Distributed Learning at the University of Central Florida. Her duties cover instructional design, support for online courses and the learning management system. Linda has been instrumental in guiding faculty development for online courses and developing systems to support faculty and students. She has developed curriculum and delivered instruction in business, high school, community college, and higher education. For her doctoral dissertation, Linda studied blended learning at a metropolitan university.

Aimee deNoyelles, University of Central Florida

Aimee deNoyelles is an Associate in Instructional Design with the Center for Distributed Learning at the University of Central Florida. In the summer of 2011, Aimee joined the Instructional Design team at the Center for Distributed Learning. She earned her Bachelor’s degree in Psychology at UCF in 2000. She went on to earn her Master’s degree in Educational Psychology at East Carolina University in 2005, where she took her first online course. Through this experience, she discovered her passion for online teaching and learning. Aimee has taught social science and education courses at the college level since 2005 and has served as a technology consultant for a K-8 STEM school in Ohio. She graduated with a Doctor of Education degree in Curriculum and Instruction with a specialization in Instructional Design and Technology from the University of Cincinnati in 2011. Her research interests include eTextbooks, online discussion strategies, virtual worlds, and technology and gender. Dr. deNoyelles has published in several journals including Computers & Education, Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks, Journal of Applied Research in Higher Education, and Journal of Special Education Technology.

Kelvin Thompson, University of Central Florida

A popular speaker and facilitator, Dr. Kelvin Thompson regularly addresses groups throughout the US on topics related to online/blended learning and educational technology while he serves as an associate director for the University of Central Florida's (UCF) Center for Distributed Learning with a faculty appointment as a graduate faculty scholar within UCF's College of Education & Human Performance, and he has collaborated on the design of hundreds of online and blended courses over the past seventeen years. Dr. Thompson oversees CDL's strategic initiatives, including accessibility activities, and he developed the BlendKit Course open courseware as part of UCF's Blended Learning Toolkit, and he also co-hosts TOPcast: The Teaching Online Podcast available on iTunes and at http://topcast.online.ucf.edu. His personal research interests center on how interaction affects learner engagement, and information on his Online Course Criticism qualitative evaluation model for facilitating the scholarship of teaching and learning in online and blended environments is available online: http://onlinecoursecriticism.com. Kelvin holds an Ed.D in curriculum and instruction and an MA in instructional systems technology from UCF and a Bachelor of Music Education degree from The Florida State University.

Wendy Howard, University of Central Florida

Wendy Howard is an Associate in Instructional Design with the Center for Distributed Learning at the University of Central Florida. Wendy joined the Instructional Design team in July 2011 with a diverse background in both corporate training and higher education. In addition to her Doctor of Education degree in Instructional Design & Technology from UCF, Wendy has also earned a BA in Mathematics and Secondary Education and an MA in Corporate Communication & Technology. Wendy also provides a practitioner’s perspective based on over fifteen years of experience in both design and instruction. Her career began in academia as a Course Director at Full Sail University in the Game Design & Development program and an Adjunct Professor at Rollins College in the Communication and Information Technology departments. She then spent over 8 years growing in the technical training field for multiple software companies and continues to stay active in corporate online training. Her dissertation research was a formative evaluation of a technology-mediated alternative to traditional study abroad, and her current research agenda is focused on blended learning, online engagement, and collaborative technology for international education.

Downloads

Published

2016-08-03

Issue

Section

Invited Papers / 2015 OLC Conference Special Issue