To view the full text of this article...
Subscribe for faster access!
Subscribe for only $19/month (or $150/year) and receive immediate access to 20,000+ documents/media files.
Purchase individual articles and papers
Purchase fulltext access to individual articles and papers for $9.95 USD each. You can purchase as a guest or save your information for faster access later.
Already have an account?
Institutions
If you are accessing the system through an institution or library, find out if they have a subscription to the digital library. If they do, please have them contact us with the IP address for this machine: 38.107.179.217.
Increasing Student Discourse to Support Rapport Building in Web and Blended Courses Using a 3D Online Learning Environment
New Search | Print Abstract | E-mail Abstract | Full Text | Save to My Collections | Export Citation |
Jones, J., Warren, S. & Robertson, M. (2009). Increasing Student Discourse to Support Rapport Building in Web and Blended Courses Using a 3D Online Learning Environment. Journal of Interactive Learning Research, 20(3), 269-294. Chesapeake, VA: AACE.
Retrieved from http://www.editlib.org/p/28153.
Journal Information

Journal of Interactive Learning Research
ISSN 1093-023X
Volume 20, Issue 3, July 2009
Association for the Advancement of Computing in Education (AACE) Chesapeake, VA
More Information on JILR
Authors
Abstract
This article presents research conducted between 2002 and 2007 that examines user discourse, message flow, and exchange frequency in Web-only courses, blended courses, and then the same types of courses extended with a 3D online learning environment. The purpose of this study is to examine the impact that a 3D online learning environment has on discourse with Web-only and blended courses. Findings from this study suggest that the addition of a 3D online learning environment to both Web-only and blended courses demonstrates the ability to more rapidly create rapport among users, which translates into accelerated discourse that occurs earlier in and sustains itself longer and throughout the semester.
Keywords
- Virtual Environments
- Distance Education
- Interaction
- Learning Management Systems
- Information Communication Technologies
Also Read
- Professors' Perceptions and Needs on Blended e-learning
- Perspectives on Blended Learning in Higher Education
- A Special Passage Through Asia E-Learning
- Research Highlights in Technology and Teacher Education 2009
- The Convergence of Digital Storytelling and Popular Culture in Graduate Education
- Finding a Balance in Dimensions of Blended Learning
- Student Perceptions of Interactions and Course Satisfaction in a Blended Learning Environment
- Relationship of Technology Affinity to STEM Dispositions in Higher Education Learners
- Motivational Challenges of Adult Learners in Self-Directed e-Learning
- Professors’ and Students’ Perceptions of Online Learning: A Qualitative Study
Tags
Add tagComments & Discussion
Comment on the paper above. You must be registered to participate. Registration is free.

New comment