This study examined students’ active engagement in the context of aligned curriculum and instruction. In conjunction with Biggs’ (2003) notion of constructive alignment, the ten principles of engagement suggested by Krause (2005) informed the redesign of an undergraduate course, which was delivered fully online and had a work-based learning component. The results of the present study strongly suggest that the course redesign has lead to significantly increased student engagement and achievement of higher order outcomes. Statistical analyses using Student t-tests revealed highly significant increases (p=0.002) in student engagement as measured by the average total ‘hits per student’ on learning resources, and a highly significant increase (p=0.001) in student engagement within the Discussion Forum on the online learning environment. Findings in the study highlighted a number of implications for educational practice, one of which is the need for a University- or systemic-wide review of the constraints that inhibit responsive course redesign.
History
Start Page
820
End Page
831
Number of Pages
12
Start Date
2009-01-01
ISBN-13
9781877314827
Location
Auckland, New Zealand
Publisher
University of Auckland, Auckland University of Technology, & ASCILITE,
Place of Publication
Auckland.
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Open Access
No
External Author Affiliations
Conference; Curriculum Design and Development Unit; Division of Strategy, Quality and Review; Learning and Teaching Education Research Centre (LTERC); Navigate CQUni Division;
Era Eligible
Yes
Name of Conference
Australasian Society for Computers in Learning in Tertiary Education. Conference