If you’re a follower of my blog, you already know that I am a believer in the potential of VoiceThread as an online teaching tool. For the past year and a half I have woven VoiceThread into my online classes to facilitate a deeper comprehension of visual concepts but I’ve been eager to understand how VoiceThread also fosters community and enhances social presence in the online classroom as well.
In December I completed a thorough assessment of the effects of VoiceThread on the learning experiences of my online students. I’m excited to share the results here and will also be showcasing these results in presentations at several upcoming venues including MoblEd in Pasadena on April 23 and 24, the Online Teaching Conference in Aptos on June 11 and 12, the Sloan-C Symposium on Emerging Technologies in San Francisco on June 17-19.
I surveyed three sections of students which comprised two different courses (two sections of online Art Appreciation and one section of online History of Women in Art). Both classes consistently interacted in a VoiceThread to contribute to collaborative discussions and visual assessments of concepts from learning units (comprised of readings and lectures). Students were given the option to leave comments in text, audio or webcam format. In the VoiceThreads, I regularly replied to student comments before a due date, usually in either webcam or audio format, and my comments were made available to the entire class. My replies provided opportunity to redirect students in their application of concepts, contribute further guidance in discussions or applaud students for excellent work.
A total of 101 students were surveyed and 87 responded (an 88% response rate). Out of those who responded, 70% of the students either strongly agreed or agreed that the use of VoiceThread contributed to establishing a sense of community in this class. Community is an important element in fostering a student’s motivation to continue with an online class, as online learners continually struggle with feelings of isolation as they go about their learning experience physically isolated from their classmates and instructor.
75% of the respondents strongly agreed or agreed that VoiceThread promoted their ability to learn visual concepts, an essential learning outcome of any visually-oriented discipline (art history, photography, humanities) and a point that is increasingly more compelling to all disciplines as we unravel the critical role of teaching visual literacy across the board in all disciplines as a 21st century skill. Visual literacy, the ability to understanding and decipher messages communicated through images, is an essential skill if one’s goal is to live freely with the ability to critically deconstruct the manipulative messages that saturate the lives of Americans. I believe that if course management systems (Blackboard, Moodle, Desire 2 Learn, etc.) were to integrate more tools, like VoiceThread, that promote the seamless teaching of concepts and ideas with images, rather than tools that dominate with text and (sometimes) integrate images in a secondary, supplementary role, more educators would see the potentials of visual teaching regardless of their discipline.
Additionally, students noted an increased sense of feeling more connected to me through the ability to hear my voice in the audio comments and see me in the web cam comments utilized in VoiceThread. 82% of students strongly agreed or agreed that hearing my voice increased their sense that I was actively present in their learning experience. And 85% strongly agreed or agreed that seeing me in the web cam comments reached the same objective. These results build upon the recent research of Phil Ice who published a study in the Sloan-C Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks in July 2007 focused on assessing the use of asynchronous audio feedback on the learning effects of online learners.
As I reflect on these results, I am taken aback by the overwhelming pleas that students convey for increased community in their online classes. As educators, we need be in tune with our students feelings about learning online. Successful online programs are those that promote learning inclusivity. This means fostering online spaces in which students are respected as equals and expected to connect and construct content in the online class.
If you’d like to learn how to create a VoiceThread, here is a 10-minute video tutorial I created and you are welcome to download my Educator’s Guide to VoiceThread.
Really good job analyzing the use of VoiceThread. You have convinced me to use it in my own studies.
Hi Thomas, thanks! It feels good to be able to share some data about how VoiceThread has been enhancing and retexturizing my students’ learning landscape. I am now using it as a regular component of a face-to-face class and look forward to assessing its potential to on expand traditional class discussions beyond the four walls of our classroom. Stay tuned! -Michelle
Michelle:
I have become convinced that I have to find a way to separate me and my students from the textbook publishing industry. I’m thinking of using smarthistory as a jumping off point and suplementing with voice thread discussions… any thoughts? Tricia
Hi Tricia. My thoughts are that you’re headed in a terrific direction. You need to be thinking clearly about assessments and how you’ll be structuring your entire course design. Moving away from a book will enliven your students learning and enable each of them more opportunities to engage with interactive content (and if you’re utilizing smarthistory, it’s excellent, high quality content too). But the thing you need to be focusing on here is the word “selecting.” You need to keep their path focused, in some way, so they understand your expectations of them and how or what objectives you’ll be assessing them on. I wish you much luck on your journey. Perhaps you and the other part-timer art history instructors could begin an online discussion community to share your ideas? You’re all wonderful. Take care.
-Michelle
Thanks, Michelle: I have to admit that I am a bit concerned about managing the grading part of all this. Unlike the Blackboard discussion tool there is no posting of the number of times students contribute, etc. I appreciate the concern that students understand the expectations, too. I had a student turn in a paper recently in a newletter format… all glitzy looking but not the old fashioned “academic” paper so I have some ambivalent feelings about allowing creativity vs. teaching them the standards expected for grad school, which is still pretty traditional. But, I guess balancing these kinds of concerns is what starts the dialogue that keeps all of us thinking and sharing.
Tricia
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