ETD RECORD

Asynchronous discourse in a web-assisted mathematics education course

Citation

Li, Zhongxiao.. (2009). Asynchronous discourse in a web-assisted mathematics education course. Theses and Dissertations Collection, University of Idaho Library Digital Collections. https://www.lib.uidaho.edu/digital/etd/items/etd_25.html

Title:
Asynchronous discourse in a web-assisted mathematics education course
Author:
Li, Zhongxiao.
Date:
2009
Keywords:
Internet in education Interaction analysis in education
Program:
Mathematics
Abstract:
Fall term of 2006, a web-assisted undergraduate mathematics course was taught at the University of Idaho: Math 235 Mathematics for Elementary Teachers I. The course goals were: To foster a deep understanding of critical mathematical content; and to promote the development of mathematical communication and collaboration concepts, skills, and dispositions. Outside of regular class periods, students participated in an ongoing asynchronous mathematical dialogue using an asynchronous communication network - WebCT threaded discussion forum.;A modified rubric from the Interaction Analysis Model (Gunawardena, Lowe, and Anderson, 1997) was utilized to code the cognitive level of student postings on WebCT . The focus of this study was to explore changes in students' level of higher-order thinking and knowledge construction in asynchronous threaded discussions, the emergence of communication patterns and structures in the network, and relationships between role centrality and concept centrality in student discourse. It employed multiple analysis techniques by employing both content analysis and social network analysis to pursue its research foci. Results revealed that students did not post consistently at high, middle, or low levels, the level of student discourse from topic to topic increased over time as fewer low- and middle-level messages were posted relative to high-level messages, and student(s) with the highest role centrality were the same students who contributed the ideas with the highest content centrality. Also, a slightly weaker relationship was found in which students with lesser role centrality were lesser (but meaningful) contributors of central concepts.
Description:
Thesis (Ph. D., Mathematics)--University of Idaho, July 2009.
Major Professor:
David A. Thomas.
Defense Date:
July 2009.
Type:
Text
Format Original:
xiii, 152 leaves :ill. ;29 cm.
Format:
record

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