TY - JOUR
T1 - Interacting for learning
T2 - Digital portfolios for a learning community in a university course
AU - Blau, Ina
AU - Mor, Nili
AU - Neuthal, Tami
PY - 2013
Y1 - 2013
N2 - This study investigates student interactions in a blog-based learning community in a university course. In addition, this study explores the dynamics of group interactions in individual blog-based environments compared with collaborative wiki-based educational activities. A learning community of 56 graduate students wrote individual blogs and weekly group summaries using a wiki environment. The posts were analyzed by identifying a post content type and explicit feedback promotions, and by counting the number of the blogger's own comments and the number of others' comments per post, received from peers studying in the same versus the other offline group. The results show that choosing the appropriate type of post content (i.e., sharing experiences rather than providing information, explicitly calling for feedback, and providing the blogger's own comments) augments peer interaction in a blog environment, thus explaining 51.4% of variance in peer comments. Group interactions through comments in individual blogs, without the possibility of changing one another's content, seem to be non-intrusive and prompt interactions with offline as well as with online peers. In contrast, actual editing of texts through multi-authored collaborative wikis remained affected by student offline former acquaintance. The results are discussed in terms of social interactions and pedagogical beliefs.
AB - This study investigates student interactions in a blog-based learning community in a university course. In addition, this study explores the dynamics of group interactions in individual blog-based environments compared with collaborative wiki-based educational activities. A learning community of 56 graduate students wrote individual blogs and weekly group summaries using a wiki environment. The posts were analyzed by identifying a post content type and explicit feedback promotions, and by counting the number of the blogger's own comments and the number of others' comments per post, received from peers studying in the same versus the other offline group. The results show that choosing the appropriate type of post content (i.e., sharing experiences rather than providing information, explicitly calling for feedback, and providing the blogger's own comments) augments peer interaction in a blog environment, thus explaining 51.4% of variance in peer comments. Group interactions through comments in individual blogs, without the possibility of changing one another's content, seem to be non-intrusive and prompt interactions with offline as well as with online peers. In contrast, actual editing of texts through multi-authored collaborative wikis remained affected by student offline former acquaintance. The results are discussed in terms of social interactions and pedagogical beliefs.
KW - blog
KW - collaboration
KW - digital portfolios
KW - learning community in a university course
KW - pedagogical beliefs
KW - peer social interactions
KW - wiki
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84883485811&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/17439884.2012.709864
DO - 10.1080/17439884.2012.709864
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
AN - SCOPUS:84883485811
SN - 1743-9884
VL - 38
SP - 241
EP - 255
JO - Learning, Media and Technology
JF - Learning, Media and Technology
IS - 3
ER -