Educational Technology

February 3, 2017

Knowledge retention in capstone experiences: An analysis of online and face-to-face courses

Filed under: Educational Technology — admin @ 12:32 am

by John P. Girard, Johnathan Yerby, Kevin Floyd: KMEL Journal

This research chronicles the development of a capstone experience by a regional comprehensive university. The process began with a multi-year project during which the faculty annually reviewed the results with a view to determining if the class provided the deep learning culminating experiences anticipated. A major measure of success was the desire to replicate the deep learning common in face-to-face classes in the online environment. The results of 166 students were analyzed, 82 online and 84 face-to-face, to determine if a difference existed. A one-way ANOVA tested the score differences among 10 sections and determined the students’ scores did not differ significantly. Finally, a two-sample t-test between proportions determined that there was not a significant difference between the online and face-to-face students with respect to the level of assessment scores earned. Given that online and face-to-face students demonstrate the same level of knowledge, does this beg the question, what value does face-to-face class time offer?

http://www.kmel-journal.org/ojs/index.php/online-publication/article/view/385

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