As online education proliferates, one concern that has been raised is that it may fail to capture desirable emergent phe-nomena from on-campus programs. Student community is one example of such a phenomenon: on-campus student communities thrive based on synchronous collocation. An online program might be designed to capture all deliberate constructs in an on-campus program, but there may be beneficial side effects of synchronous collocation that are not apparent. In this work, we examine the issue of social isolation in an online graduate program. By happenstance, three studies were conducted in relative isolation looking at social isolation from different angles. The first study exam-ined trajectories in social presence as a semester proceeded. The second study developed an understanding of students' needs with regard to community in an online program. The third study tested out an immersive virtual environment to try to improve students' sense of connectedness. Combin-ing their findings, we find compelling evidence of the exist-ence of a Synchronicity Paradox in online education: stu-dents desire synchronicity to form strong social communi-ties, and yet part of the chief appeal of these online pro-grams is their asynchronicity. In light of this finding, we provide design guidelines for how synchronicity may be reintroduced into asynchronous programs without sacrific-ing the benefits of asynchronicity. More specifically, we propose that scale itself may be the key to building emer-gent synchronicity.
Description
The Synchronicity Paradox in Online Education | Proceedings of the Seventh ACM Conference on Learning @ Scale
%0 Conference Paper
%1 Joyner_2020
%A Joyner, David A.
%A Wang, Qiaosi
%A Thakare, Suyash
%A Jing, Shan
%A Goel, Ashok
%A MacIntyre, Blair
%B Proceedings of the Seventh ACM Conference on Learning @ Scale
%D 2020
%I ACM
%K LAS2020 mooc online-learning
%P 15-24
%R 10.1145/3386527.3405922
%T The Synchronicity Paradox in Online Education
%U https://doi.org/10.1145%2F3386527.3405922
%X As online education proliferates, one concern that has been raised is that it may fail to capture desirable emergent phe-nomena from on-campus programs. Student community is one example of such a phenomenon: on-campus student communities thrive based on synchronous collocation. An online program might be designed to capture all deliberate constructs in an on-campus program, but there may be beneficial side effects of synchronous collocation that are not apparent. In this work, we examine the issue of social isolation in an online graduate program. By happenstance, three studies were conducted in relative isolation looking at social isolation from different angles. The first study exam-ined trajectories in social presence as a semester proceeded. The second study developed an understanding of students' needs with regard to community in an online program. The third study tested out an immersive virtual environment to try to improve students' sense of connectedness. Combin-ing their findings, we find compelling evidence of the exist-ence of a Synchronicity Paradox in online education: stu-dents desire synchronicity to form strong social communi-ties, and yet part of the chief appeal of these online pro-grams is their asynchronicity. In light of this finding, we provide design guidelines for how synchronicity may be reintroduced into asynchronous programs without sacrific-ing the benefits of asynchronicity. More specifically, we propose that scale itself may be the key to building emer-gent synchronicity.
@inproceedings{Joyner_2020,
abstract = {As online education proliferates, one concern that has been raised is that it may fail to capture desirable emergent phe-nomena from on-campus programs. Student community is one example of such a phenomenon: on-campus student communities thrive based on synchronous collocation. An online program might be designed to capture all deliberate constructs in an on-campus program, but there may be beneficial side effects of synchronous collocation that are not apparent. In this work, we examine the issue of social isolation in an online graduate program. By happenstance, three studies were conducted in relative isolation looking at social isolation from different angles. The first study exam-ined trajectories in social presence as a semester proceeded. The second study developed an understanding of students' needs with regard to community in an online program. The third study tested out an immersive virtual environment to try to improve students' sense of connectedness. Combin-ing their findings, we find compelling evidence of the exist-ence of a Synchronicity Paradox in online education: stu-dents desire synchronicity to form strong social communi-ties, and yet part of the chief appeal of these online pro-grams is their asynchronicity. In light of this finding, we provide design guidelines for how synchronicity may be reintroduced into asynchronous programs without sacrific-ing the benefits of asynchronicity. More specifically, we propose that scale itself may be the key to building emer-gent synchronicity.
},
added-at = {2020-08-12T23:59:55.000+0200},
author = {Joyner, David A. and Wang, Qiaosi and Thakare, Suyash and Jing, Shan and Goel, Ashok and MacIntyre, Blair},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/27ab57eaa92ae6adcca76343c456a2ba3/brusilovsky},
booktitle = {Proceedings of the Seventh {ACM} Conference on Learning @ Scale},
description = {The Synchronicity Paradox in Online Education | Proceedings of the Seventh ACM Conference on Learning @ Scale},
doi = {10.1145/3386527.3405922},
interhash = {ecc313d9248f7608ef17c5e4d3d4c2c5},
intrahash = {7ab57eaa92ae6adcca76343c456a2ba3},
keywords = {LAS2020 mooc online-learning},
month = aug,
pages = {15-24},
publisher = {{ACM}},
timestamp = {2020-08-12T23:59:55.000+0200},
title = {The Synchronicity Paradox in Online Education},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145%2F3386527.3405922},
year = 2020
}