Teacher communication preferred over peer interaction

Autor: Peter Simmons, Felicity Small, David Dowell
Rok vydání: 2012
Předmět:
Zdroj: Journal of International Education in Business. 5:114-128
ISSN: 2046-469X
DOI: 10.1108/18363261211281735
Popis: PurposeTeachers have access to a growing range of online tools to support course delivery, but which ones are valued by students? Expectations and satisfaction are important constructs in the delivery of a service product, and how these constructs operate in a service environment, such as education where the student can also take on the role of the customer is unknown. This study focuses on the student perspective of online tools. The aim of this paper is to measure students' expectations and perceived importance of, and satisfaction with, a range of tools available in a virtual learning environment.Design/methodology/approachA quantitative survey (n=396) was conducted and descriptive measures and statistical analysis were produced.FindingsResults show that the tools that enable instructors to communicate with students and vice versa are more important to students and more satisfying to them than tools that enable students to interact with each other. Also, business students appear to be different from non‐business students, with respect to desired communications tools.Practical implicationsThe findings help us to understand business students' communication preference, which in turn helps teachers to create an educationally meaningful learning environment.Originality/valueThis work connects an established model for online interactions with students' expectations and level of satisfaction with tools that are currently being used in the online education environment.
Databáze: OpenAIRE