Character Development in a Distance Education Literature Course: Perspectives on Independent Study English 395R-Christian Fantasy Literature

The goals of higher education often entail the development of students' character. Rarely, however, are these character development goals connected to the unique design and delivery of distance education programs. Additionally, the research literature that explores the character development asp...

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Main Author: Johnson, Michael C.
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1919
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2918&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-29182019-05-16T03:08:12Z Character Development in a Distance Education Literature Course: Perspectives on Independent Study English 395R-Christian Fantasy Literature Johnson, Michael C. The goals of higher education often entail the development of students' character. Rarely, however, are these character development goals connected to the unique design and delivery of distance education programs. Additionally, the research literature that explores the character development aspects of distance education is sparse. Thus the purpose of this study is to contribute to the understanding of how character development may occur in a distance context. Taking a hermeneutic phenomenological approach, I examined instructor and student perceptions of character development in a fantasy literature independent study course. Findings indicate that students perceived development of traits and strengths in the following areas: moral character (moral desires, moral discernment, and moral courage); relational character (improved relationships, open-mindedness, the sharing of learning with others, and improved communication); spiritual character (humility, faith, hope, and charity); and performance character (self-discipline and self-directedness in learning, analytical and deep approach to learning, imagination and creativity, appreciation of literature, motivation to continue education, and self-confidence). Participants also perceived a variety of corresponding approaches, methods, factors, and influences for bringing about such character development, such as (a) the applicability of literary themes and character attributes and experiences to their lives; (b) the conversational nature of the instruction (an invitational and deep learning approach, preparation for reading and analyzing the literature, offering choices to enhance engagement and relevance, asking questions that promote analysis and personal connections with the literature, affording multiple opportunities to write, and providing timely, encouraging, and helpful feedback); (c) a trusting, respectful, and friendly relationship between the student and instructor (obtained through the instructional conversation and the instructor's personal and engaging writing style, personalizing contacts, being helpful and showing concern, and being sincere and honest); (d) the independent study context (flexibility in time and location and a more independent learning experience); and (e) the students' readiness and agency (choices, initiative, and effort). Students also perceived interrelationships among these elements. The study offers possible implications for character development in the context of distance education, as well as directions for future research. 2009-08-12T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1919 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2918&context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive character character education moral education distance education qualitative research hermeneutic phenomenology literature Christian fantasy fantasy literature independent study Educational Psychology
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic character
character education
moral education
distance education
qualitative research
hermeneutic phenomenology
literature
Christian fantasy
fantasy literature
independent study
Educational Psychology
spellingShingle character
character education
moral education
distance education
qualitative research
hermeneutic phenomenology
literature
Christian fantasy
fantasy literature
independent study
Educational Psychology
Johnson, Michael C.
Character Development in a Distance Education Literature Course: Perspectives on Independent Study English 395R-Christian Fantasy Literature
description The goals of higher education often entail the development of students' character. Rarely, however, are these character development goals connected to the unique design and delivery of distance education programs. Additionally, the research literature that explores the character development aspects of distance education is sparse. Thus the purpose of this study is to contribute to the understanding of how character development may occur in a distance context. Taking a hermeneutic phenomenological approach, I examined instructor and student perceptions of character development in a fantasy literature independent study course. Findings indicate that students perceived development of traits and strengths in the following areas: moral character (moral desires, moral discernment, and moral courage); relational character (improved relationships, open-mindedness, the sharing of learning with others, and improved communication); spiritual character (humility, faith, hope, and charity); and performance character (self-discipline and self-directedness in learning, analytical and deep approach to learning, imagination and creativity, appreciation of literature, motivation to continue education, and self-confidence). Participants also perceived a variety of corresponding approaches, methods, factors, and influences for bringing about such character development, such as (a) the applicability of literary themes and character attributes and experiences to their lives; (b) the conversational nature of the instruction (an invitational and deep learning approach, preparation for reading and analyzing the literature, offering choices to enhance engagement and relevance, asking questions that promote analysis and personal connections with the literature, affording multiple opportunities to write, and providing timely, encouraging, and helpful feedback); (c) a trusting, respectful, and friendly relationship between the student and instructor (obtained through the instructional conversation and the instructor's personal and engaging writing style, personalizing contacts, being helpful and showing concern, and being sincere and honest); (d) the independent study context (flexibility in time and location and a more independent learning experience); and (e) the students' readiness and agency (choices, initiative, and effort). Students also perceived interrelationships among these elements. The study offers possible implications for character development in the context of distance education, as well as directions for future research.
author Johnson, Michael C.
author_facet Johnson, Michael C.
author_sort Johnson, Michael C.
title Character Development in a Distance Education Literature Course: Perspectives on Independent Study English 395R-Christian Fantasy Literature
title_short Character Development in a Distance Education Literature Course: Perspectives on Independent Study English 395R-Christian Fantasy Literature
title_full Character Development in a Distance Education Literature Course: Perspectives on Independent Study English 395R-Christian Fantasy Literature
title_fullStr Character Development in a Distance Education Literature Course: Perspectives on Independent Study English 395R-Christian Fantasy Literature
title_full_unstemmed Character Development in a Distance Education Literature Course: Perspectives on Independent Study English 395R-Christian Fantasy Literature
title_sort character development in a distance education literature course: perspectives on independent study english 395r-christian fantasy literature
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2009
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/1919
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=2918&context=etd
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