scholarly journals Students’ Perceptions Of The Importance Of Faculty Commitment To Student Success For Their Learning Success

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ahmed Khan ◽  
Gene Gloeckner ◽  
George Morgan
Author(s):  
Nicole Buzzetto-Hollywood ◽  
Kathy Quinn ◽  
Wendy Wang ◽  
Austin Hill

Aim: This study sought to explore the role of the elusive non-cognitive skill set known as grit, or the resolve and determination to achieve goals regardless of impediments, on student success in online education. It represents an area of exploration where there is a dearth in the available literature and reports the results of a study conducted at a Mid-Atlantic minority-serving university that examined the relationship between grit and student performance in fully online courses. Methodology: Students were administered the standard 12-Question Grit Scale with the addition of a series of validated questions that sought to measure perceived self-learning efficacy. Additionally, student performances in online courses were recorded and correlations conducted. Basic statistical analyses such as mean, mode, standard deviation, variance, and confidence interval were calculated. Two hypotheses were introduced as part of this study and tested with Anovas and crosstabulations. Results: This study found that higher grit scores correlated progressively to both self-discipline and self-efficacy but that a positive relationship to student achievement in fully online courses as measured with a p value of greater than .05 could not be confirmed. Conclusion: As online education continues to grow, providing opportunities to foster and strengthen student success in online courses and programs is increasingly important. E-learning success requires that students exhibit strong self-regulation, self-discipline, resilience, dutifulness, conscientiousness, and low impulsivity all of which are attributes of grit. As such, grit is presented as a promising area of exploration for increasing student achievement in online education.


10.28945/4597 ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 19 ◽  
pp. 489-510
Author(s):  
Yulei Gavin Zhang ◽  
Mandy Yan Dang

Aim/Purpose: In this study, we aim to understand factors that can influence technology-supported learning, specifically in the blended environment. To do that, a research model is developed by incorporating factors from three perspectives, including self-related factors, technology and systems factors, and the instructional design factor. Background: Technology-supported learning has changed the way of instruction dramatically in higher education, from e-learning to the more recent blended learning. Because of the increased popularity and wide adoption of blended learning, it would be of importance for educators and researchers to know and understand factors that could lead to student success in the blended environment. Methodology: The survey method was used in this study. The study site is a freshman-level, introduction to computer information systems class, at a major public university located in the United States, which adopts the blended learning instructional method. In total, 699 students completed the survey. Contribution: This paper contributes to the existing literature by investigating potential, influential factors on blended learning success from multiple perspectives. In addition, a research model is developed and tested in order to systematically investigate and understand the impacts of those factors on student success in such a learning environment. Findings: Some interesting results have been identified. One is that students’ computer self-efficacy doesn’t play any significant role in influencing their perceptions of either the learning climate, task-technology fit, or the level of flexibility associated with blended learning. However, their own motivation to learn could significantly influence the first two of them. Another important result we find is that all four technology and systems related factors, including information quality, system quality, service quality, and media richness, have significant impacts on students’ perceptions of learning climate, task-technology fit, and blended learning flexibility. We also find that the instructional design factor can significantly influence blended learning success. Recommendations for Practitioners: This study offers a research model that researchers could adopt to evaluate student success in blended learning or technology-supported education in general. Recommendation for Researchers: This study offers a research model that researchers could adopt to evaluate student success in blended learning, or technology-supported education in general. Impact on Society: The higher education industry needs to gain a better understanding of how potential factors could influence student success in blended learning (or technology-supported learning in general) in order to ensure the success of the use of modern information technology and systems to assist students’ learning. Future Research: Future research can further examine and validate the research model proposed in this study on other class settings and with different types of study bodies. In addition, future research may identify other types of important factors and further extend the proposed research model.


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 42-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kelly E. Matthews

AbstractStudent success is of the upmost importance across the global higher education sector with a wealth of rich scholarship demonstrating the complexity of influences and factors that shape success. This article acknowledges that complexity and focuses on how students perceive, and partner in, shaping notions of their learning success through an analysis of two in-depth case studies. I draw on the theoretical framework ofstudents as partners in learning and teaching. Broader implications are articulated followed by a specific focus on cross-cultural partnership from the perspective of a Chinese student partner. I argue that higher education scholars researching student success and learning outcomes should take seriously the perceptions of students to inform practice and policy, while also partnering with students in our own research to more genuinely comprehend the complexities of student success.


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