1st Edition

Culture and Online Learning Global Perspectives and Research

Edited By Insung Jung, Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena Copyright 2014
    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    Culture plays an overarching role that impacts investment, planning, design, development, delivery, and the learning outcomes of online education. This groundbreaking book remedies a dearth of empirical research on how digital cultures and teaching and learning cultures intersect, and offers grounded theory and practical guidance on how to integrate cultural needs and sensibilities with the innovative opportunities offered by online learning. This book provides a unique analysis of culture in online education from a global perspective, and offers:* An overview of the influences that culture has on teaching, online learning, and technology* Culture-sensitive instructional design strategies and teaching guidelines for online instructors and trainers * Facilitation and support strategies for online learners from different cultures * An overview on issues of design, development, communication, and support from a cross-cultural perspective* An overview of how online education is perceived, planned, implemented, and evaluated differently in various cultural contextsWritten by international experts in the field of online learning, this text constitutes with a comprehensive comparative introduction to the role of culture in online education. It offers essential guidance for practitioners, researchers, instructors, and anyone working with online students from around the world. This text is also appropriate for graduate-level Educational Technology and Comparative and International Learning programs.

    List of Tables and Figures Foreword—Michael Grahame Moore 1. Perspectives on Culture and Online Learning—Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena and Insung Jung 2. Cultural Influences on Online Learning—Insung Jung 3. Culture and Technology—Insung Jung 4. Online Identity and Interaction— Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena 5. Emerging Visual Culture in Online Learning Environments—Ilju Rha 6. Accounting for Culture in Instructional Design—Casey Frechette, Ludmila C. Layne, and Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena 7. Facilitating Online Learning and Cross-Cultural E-Mentoring—Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena and Buddhini Gayathri Jayatilleke 8. Supporting Diverse Online Learners—Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena 9. Diversity in Expectations of Quality and Assessment—Albert Sangrà, Stella Porto, and Insung Jung 10. Developing Global Digital Citizens. A Professional Development Model—Chih-Hsiung Tu and Marina Stock McIsaac 11. Leadership Challenges in Transcultural Online Education—Michael F. Beaudoin 12. Gender Issues in Online Learning—Colin Latchem 13. Transformative Learning Through Cultural Exchanges in Online Foreign Language Teaching—Kerrin Ann Barrett 14. International Interpretations of Icons and Images Used in North American Academic Websites—Eliot Knight, Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena, Elena Barbera, and Cengiz Hakan Aydin 15. An Analysis of Culture-Focused Articles in Open, Distance, and Online Education Journals—Aisha S. Al-Harthi 16. Many Faces of Confucian Culture. Asian Learners’ Perceptions of Quality Distance Education—Li Chen, Xinyi Shen, Aya Fukuda, and Insung Jung 17. Looking Ahead. A Cultural Approach to Research and Practice in Online Learning—Insung Jung and Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena About the Editors and Contributors Index

    Biography

    Insung Jung is Professor and Chair of Education, Media and Society at the International Christian University in Tokyo. Before joining ICU in 2003, she served as the Director of the Multimedia Education/E-Learning Center at the Ewha Women’s University in Seoul for three years. The Center was established to develop, deliver and manage e-learning programs for the University and involved in establishing numerous collaborative relationships with national, regional and international institutions to develop and deliver web-based distance education programs to professional women in the region and throughout the world. Charlotte Nirmalani Gunawardena is Regents’ Professor of Distance Education and Instructional Technology in the Organizational Learning and Instructional Technology Program at the University of New Mexico. For over twenty years she has published widely and presented on distance education, eLearning, and Instructional Technology. She currently researches the social construction of knowledge in online learning communities, the socio-cultural context of online learning, social presence theory, and cross-cultural e-mentoring. She has served as Principal Investigator and Project Director for U.S. federal research and evaluation grants, and was a Fulbright senior researcher in Morocco and Sri Lanka. She has consulted for World Bank and Asian Development Bank distance education projects, and the Ministry of Education in Sri Lanka to train online teachers and instructional designers for its National Online Distance Education Service.

    “Just as neither religion nor culture is monolithic, neither is online learning. This stimulating collection from around the world will help online teachers to negotiate better the various cultural divides and thus offer our students better online learning experiences.”

    Reflective Teaching (Wabash Center)