Notes: Garrison, D. Online Community of Inquiry Review: Social, Cognitive, and Teaching Presence Issues

Garrison, D.R. (2007). Online community of inquiry review: Social, cognitive, and teaching presence issues. Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks. pp. 61-72.

from abstract:

>The early research in the area of online communities of inquiry has raised several issues with regard to the creation and maintenance of social, cognitive and teaching presence that require further research and analysis. The other overarching issue is the methodological validity associated with the community of inquiry framework.

on communities of inquiry:

>Higher education has consistently viewed community as essential to support collaborative learning and discourse associated with higher levels of learning. Moreover, the asynchronous nature of online communication and the potential for disconnectedness has focused attention on the issue of community.

more talk about the background/theory of social/cognitive/teaching presences. blahblahblah.

on teaching presence:

>Interaction and discourse plays a key role in higher-order learning but not without structure (design) and leadership (facilitation and direction).

dialog and discourse are different:

>From a teaching perspective, this is the difference between dialogue and discourse [39]. Facilitation supports dialogue with minimal shaping of the course of the discussion. Discourse, on the other hand, is disciplined inquiry that requires a knowledgeable teacher with the expectation that discourse progresses in a collaborative constructive manner and students gain an awareness of the inquiry process.

on coding and validity:

>There is the question, however, as to why we would want to code at the indicator level? Coding at the indicator level is difficult [45]. Is it not a bit premature considering the early stage of this research and testing of the framework? What research questions would coding at the indicator level answer? How does being able to distinguish among the indicators add to the validity of the model? Are indicators too context specific to expect a standard set of indicators across all online educational environments?

conclusions:

>A community of inquiry needs to have clear expectations as to the nature of critical discourse and their postings. Participants need to be aware of the academic objectives, the phases of inquiry, and the level of discourse. These educational challenges raise the importance and role of teaching presence. The distinction between facilitation and direction must also be clear from a design perspective. Teaching presence must consider the dual role of both moderating and shaping the direction of the discourse. Both are essential for a successful community of inquiry.

Notes: Vaughan & Garrison: Creating cognitive presence in a blended faculty development community

Vaughan, N. & Garrison, D.R. (2005). [Creating cognitive presence in a blended faculty development community](http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/B6W4X-4FPDRGW-2/2/4fc7b0658409bfe5002581de0ba0d383). The Internet and Higher Education. 8(1). pp 1-12.

This study compares face-to-face and online discussions in a professional development course on blended learning. Specifically looking at the three forms of presence as defined as part of the community of inquiry model (but with an emphasis on how participants move through the 4 phases of the inquiry process (triggering event, exploration, integration and resolution) as part of their cognitive presence)

>Social presence creates a sense of belonging that supports meaningful inquiry. Social presence provides the context that makes possible critical discourse and reflection.

*DN: Would various platforms that may offer different tools to represent social presence effect the critical discourse? Same question for teaching presence and cognitive presence…*

on cognitive presence and blended learning:

>Rovai (2002)1 has shown a significant link between a sense of community and cognitive presence in that community can facilitate quality learning outcomes. However, this is not a simple and invariant relationship. In a study of informal professional development forums, Kanuka and Anderson (1998)2 found high interaction (i.e., social presence) but only a low level of cognitive exchange. Garrison and Cleveland-Innes (unpublished manuscript)3 also found that interaction by itself does not necessarily create cognitive presence. They also suggest that asynchronous online learning has considerable potential to create cognitive presence.

Methodology:

>Data were collected and transcribed from the transcripts of the online discussion forums, audio recordings of the face-to-face sessions, and a post-study interview with each participant. Online and face-to-face transcripts were coded for cognitive presence. The coding protocol from Garrison et al. (2000)4 community of inquiry model was used.

on analysis:

>The unit of analysis was a single message for the online discussion transcripts and a single participant response for the oral transcripts. Two trained graduate students completed the coding for cognitive presence and inter-rater reliability of the coding process was assessed.

Discussion:

>In a community of inquiry, it is essential that critical discourse be encouraged. Considering the reflective nature of online communication, there is a real opportunity to facilitate reflective critique. Because of the reflective potential, Meyer (2003)5 found that the threaded online discussion comments were “often more thoughtful, more reasoned, and drew evidence from other sources” than those made within the face-to-face sessions (p. 61).

Conclusions:

>The results of this research raise many questions about blended learning designs in support of a community of inquiry. However, it can be concluded from the results reported here that blended learning was successful in supporting a faculty development community of inquiry. A worthy topic for further research would be to focus on high level learning processes and outcomes using blended learning designs.

  1. Rovai, A. P. (2002). Building a sense of community at a distance. International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning, 3(1). Retrieved on July 21, 2004, from http://www.irrodl.org/content/v3.1/rovai.html []
  2. Kanuka, H., & Anderson, T. (1998). Online social interchange, discord, and knowledge construction. Journal of Distance Education, 13(1), 57-75. []
  3. Garrison, D. R., Cleveland-Innes, M. (unpublished manuscript). Facilitating cognitive presence in online learning: Interaction is not enough. has this been published since 2005? []
  4. Garrison, D. R., Anderson, T., & Archer, W. (2000). Critical thinking in a text-based environment: Computer conferencing in higher education. Internet and Higher Education, 11(2), 1-14. Retrieved July 21, 2004, from http://communitiesofinquiry.com/documents/CTinTextEnvFinal.pdf []
  5. Meyer, K. A. (2003). Face-to-face versus threaded discussions: The role of time and higher-order thinking. Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks, 7(3), 55-65. []

community of inquiry

COIWhen I started at the Teaching & Learning Centre, I knew a bit about what Randy Garrison was doing – he was the new Director of the TLC, and he’d been working on something called “[community of inquiry](http://communitiesofinquiry.com)” – but I didn’t know too much more than that. I didn’t pay it much attention, since it didn’t overlap what I was doing very much.

Years passed, and I’m now planning the research proposal for my MSc thesis. And it turns out that the Community of Inquiry model is probably the best fit for what I want to do to investigate differences in discourse between two cohorts. More info on my research proposal at a later date…

Basically, what Community of Inquiry does is to take a look at the discourse of a community, from three overlapping perspectives:

* cognitive presence
* ability of participants to construct meaning through sustained communication
* social presence
* ability of participants to project their personal characteristics into the community
* teaching presence
* design, facilitation, and direction of the community processes

You take the discourse of a community, crunch it through some latent content analyses, and get an idea for how the participants fit together along the three perspectives.

The really appealing thing about the COI model is that it has been [used by several researchers](http://communitiesofinquiry.com/references) to investigate various communities, so it’s got some validity and rigour behind it. That’ll make my job much easier, as I won’t have to spend as much time designing and defending the analysis framework…

I found it pretty interesting that my poking around with research proposal planning lead me right to Randy’s work. What are the chances that you’d happen to be working for one of the key researchers in a field?