The community of inquiry framework (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000) has been an important contribution to the online distance education field and has been useful in providing researchers with the construct of "teaching presence". Teaching presence as described by the framework provides insight into the types of interactions instructors make in online teaching, but is less useful in helping to understand the why’s of instructors’ interactive decisions. In this study, activity theory (Engeström, 1999, 2001) was adopted as a theoretical framework to understand the why’s of teaching presence, revealing a complex negotiation between instructors as subjects and the mediating components of the activity system. The article suggests that a shift...
The Community of Inquiry (COI) model’s construct of teaching presence provides a useful framework fo...
As online learning opportunities continue to grow it is important to continually consider instructor...
Teaching presence and its implications for the intellectual climate of an online classroom cannot be...
The community of inquiry framework (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000) has been an important contri...
The community of inquiry framework (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000 ) has been an important c...
A particular interest of distance education researchers is the community of inquiry framework, which...
Social presence theory was the term first proposed in 1976 to explain how telecommunications influen...
The purpose of this investigation was to explore the Community of Inquiry model (CoI) elements of te...
In this presentation, Tannis Morgan shares her doctoral research that looks at cases of teaching pre...
Using three interdependent constructs: social, cognitive, and teaching presence, the Community of In...
Given that there is no consensus on a framework for measuring presence in online teaching, this pape...
With more than 4 million students enrolled in online courses in the US alone (Allen & Seaman, 2010),...
As online learning opportunities continue to grow it is important to continually consider instructor...
This mixed methods concurrent triangulation design study was predicated upon two models that advocat...
With more than 4 million students enrolled in online courses in the US alone (Allen & Seaman, 20...
The Community of Inquiry (COI) model’s construct of teaching presence provides a useful framework fo...
As online learning opportunities continue to grow it is important to continually consider instructor...
Teaching presence and its implications for the intellectual climate of an online classroom cannot be...
The community of inquiry framework (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000) has been an important contri...
The community of inquiry framework (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000 ) has been an important c...
A particular interest of distance education researchers is the community of inquiry framework, which...
Social presence theory was the term first proposed in 1976 to explain how telecommunications influen...
The purpose of this investigation was to explore the Community of Inquiry model (CoI) elements of te...
In this presentation, Tannis Morgan shares her doctoral research that looks at cases of teaching pre...
Using three interdependent constructs: social, cognitive, and teaching presence, the Community of In...
Given that there is no consensus on a framework for measuring presence in online teaching, this pape...
With more than 4 million students enrolled in online courses in the US alone (Allen & Seaman, 2010),...
As online learning opportunities continue to grow it is important to continually consider instructor...
This mixed methods concurrent triangulation design study was predicated upon two models that advocat...
With more than 4 million students enrolled in online courses in the US alone (Allen & Seaman, 20...
The Community of Inquiry (COI) model’s construct of teaching presence provides a useful framework fo...
As online learning opportunities continue to grow it is important to continually consider instructor...
Teaching presence and its implications for the intellectual climate of an online classroom cannot be...