紧急在线学习:互动、动机、自我调节和情境因素对学习结果和继续意愿的影响

Jun Lei, Teng Lin
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引用次数: 2

摘要

本研究探讨了新冠肺炎疫情期间互动因素、动机因素、自我调节因素和情境因素对大学生在线学习成果和继续学习意愿的影响。该研究收集了中国南方一所大学255名商科学生的数据。分层多元回归分析显示,COVID-19导致的家庭经济困难是学生学习成果的显著负向预测因素,学习者-内容互动;教师提供电子资源、课程策划和组织;学生的内在目标取向和元认知自我调节是显著的正向预测因子,后两组预测因子分别介导学习者-指导者和学习者-学习者互动的影响。多项逻辑回归分析显示,学习者-导师互动、学习者-内容互动和私人学习空间是学生继续在线学习意愿的显著正向预测因子,而学习者-学习者互动是学生继续在线学习意愿的显著负向预测因子。这些发现表明,不同类型的互动因素和情境因素对学习结果和继续意愿的影响存在差异,而教师和学习者层面的因素在学习者-教师和学习者-学习者互动对学习结果的影响中起中介作用。它们有助于我们对紧急在线学习的理解,并为促进它提供了启示。
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Emergency Online Learning: The Effects of Interactional, Motivational, Self-Regulatory, and Situational Factors on Learning Outcomes and Continuation Intentions
This study investigated the effects of interactional, motivational, self-regulatory, and situational factors on university students’ online learning outcomes and continuation intentions during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data were collected from 255 students taking a business course at a university in southern China. Hierarchical multiple regression analyses revealed that while family financial hardship caused by COVID-19 was a marginally significant negative predictor of students’ learning outcomes, learner–content interaction; instructors’ provision of e-resources, course planning, and organisation; and students’ intrinsic goal orientation and meta-cognitive self-regulation were significant positive predictors with the latter two sets of predictors mediating the effects of learner–instructor and learner–learner interactions, respectively. Multinominal logistic regression analyses showed that learner–instructor interaction, learner–content interaction, and private learning space were significant positive predictors of students’ intentions to continue with online learning, but learner–learner interaction was a significant negative predictor. These findings point to the differential effects of various types of interactional and situational factors on learning outcomes and continuation intentions, and the instructor- and learner-level factors that mediate the effects of learner–instructor and learner–learner interactions on learning outcomes. They contribute to our understandings of emergency online learning and provide implications for facilitating it.
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