A Case Study: Enhancing the Learning Process and the Quality of the Students' Work in Online Courses Using Multiple High Impact Practices and Civic Strategies

Awatef A. Ben Ramadan

Abstract


Background: Employing High Impact Practices (HIPs) in the curriculum will keep the students engaged and will boost their learning outcomes.
Study Aim: Explore the students’ feedback on two HIPs practices and measure the impact of the studied HIPs on the course’s outcomes.
Methodology: Two HIPs strategies were applied to the graduate students of an advanced online eight –week course. A cross-sectional study by conducting an online Survey-Monkey survey to assess the studied HIPs. The interventions were the group leadership and scaffolding the course’s final project strategies.
Results and Discussion: 53% (n=17) of students responded. 53% very liked and liked the leadership group HIP. 82% found the leadership group HIP helpful to present and establish discussions with their classmates. 76.5% either strongly agreed or agreed that the group leadership HIP helped them as presenters and discussion moderators, as well as in handling the weekly assignments. 52.94% agreed and strongly agreed that the leadership HIP helped them, as an audience, to understand the curriculum and assisted them in handling the weekly assignments and projects. 94.12% agreed or strongly agreed that the dissemination of the final project's sections on the weekly assignments helped them understand and write the final project effectively. The average final project grades of the class under study was 97% in comparison to 90% of the same course the instructor taught in Spring 2018.
Conclusion: Introducing HIPs strategies will make the students feel that they owned the learning process and enhanced their creativity, self-confidence, and self-efficacy skills.


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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5430/ijhe.v10n2p308

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International Journal of Higher Education
ISSN 1927-6044 (Print) ISSN 1927-6052 (Online) Email: ijhe@sciedupress.com

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