Supporting online faculty: Developing a supporting website resource

Current trends in post-secondary education enrollment indicate that colleges and universities are likely to experience an increase in the number of online students. The purpose of this study was to ascertain the type of resources and support features online faculty need, desire, and expect in a sup...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eric Nordin, Peter John Anthony
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laureate Education Inc 2014-03-01
Series:Higher Learning Research Communications
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hlrcjournal.com/index.php/HLRC/article/view/158
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spelling doaj-b1f9f805abcd40d39b28cec2aa802fe92020-11-24T22:30:28ZengLaureate Education IncHigher Learning Research Communications2157-62542014-03-014110.18870/hlrc.v4i1.158158Supporting online faculty: Developing a supporting website resourceEric Nordin0Peter John Anthony1Grand Canyon University Staff/FacultyWalden University Current trends in post-secondary education enrollment indicate that colleges and universities are likely to experience an increase in the number of online students. The purpose of this study was to ascertain the type of resources and support features online faculty need, desire, and expect in a support website. The method used to collect research findings was an online survey. The participants for this study consisted of the online faculty population at an institution of higher learning in the southwestern United States. Participants were invited by email to participate in a 13 question survey which asked participants to rate the importance of the questions listed. Of the 2,522 survey invitations e-mailed to potential participants, 380 responded with completed surveys, providing a response rate of 15.06%. Although this was a relativity low response rate, researchers felt the demographics of the respondents provided an accurate representation of the population studied. Findings from the survey indicated participants agree there is a need to implement a support website. Participants indicated the support website should provide support resources, communication forums, and resources to increase connectivity to the institution. The authors note providing online faculty with support websites could be a differentiation strategy to recruit and retain quality online faculty. DOI: 10.18870/hlrc.v4i1.158 http://hlrcjournal.com/index.php/HLRC/article/view/158Online facultyonline resourcesfaculty supportfaculty needscommunicationconnectivity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Eric Nordin
Peter John Anthony
spellingShingle Eric Nordin
Peter John Anthony
Supporting online faculty: Developing a supporting website resource
Higher Learning Research Communications
Online faculty
online resources
faculty support
faculty needs
communication
connectivity
author_facet Eric Nordin
Peter John Anthony
author_sort Eric Nordin
title Supporting online faculty: Developing a supporting website resource
title_short Supporting online faculty: Developing a supporting website resource
title_full Supporting online faculty: Developing a supporting website resource
title_fullStr Supporting online faculty: Developing a supporting website resource
title_full_unstemmed Supporting online faculty: Developing a supporting website resource
title_sort supporting online faculty: developing a supporting website resource
publisher Laureate Education Inc
series Higher Learning Research Communications
issn 2157-6254
publishDate 2014-03-01
description Current trends in post-secondary education enrollment indicate that colleges and universities are likely to experience an increase in the number of online students. The purpose of this study was to ascertain the type of resources and support features online faculty need, desire, and expect in a support website. The method used to collect research findings was an online survey. The participants for this study consisted of the online faculty population at an institution of higher learning in the southwestern United States. Participants were invited by email to participate in a 13 question survey which asked participants to rate the importance of the questions listed. Of the 2,522 survey invitations e-mailed to potential participants, 380 responded with completed surveys, providing a response rate of 15.06%. Although this was a relativity low response rate, researchers felt the demographics of the respondents provided an accurate representation of the population studied. Findings from the survey indicated participants agree there is a need to implement a support website. Participants indicated the support website should provide support resources, communication forums, and resources to increase connectivity to the institution. The authors note providing online faculty with support websites could be a differentiation strategy to recruit and retain quality online faculty. DOI: 10.18870/hlrc.v4i1.158
topic Online faculty
online resources
faculty support
faculty needs
communication
connectivity
url http://hlrcjournal.com/index.php/HLRC/article/view/158
work_keys_str_mv AT ericnordin supportingonlinefacultydevelopingasupportingwebsiteresource
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