Social presence in relation to students' satisfaction and learning in the online environment: A meta-analysis

JC Richardson, Y Maeda, J Lv, S Caskurlu - Computers in Human Behavior, 2017 - Elsevier
Computers in Human Behavior, 2017Elsevier
Social presence, the ability to perceive others in an online environment, has been shown to
impact student motivation and participation, actual and perceived learning, course and
instructor satisfaction, and retention in online courses; yet very few researchers have
attempted to look across contexts, disciplinary areas, or measures of social presence. This
meta-analysis allowed us to look across these variables of the primary studies and identify
the pattern of student outcomes (eg, perceived learning and satisfaction) in relation to social …
Abstract
Social presence, the ability to perceive others in an online environment, has been shown to impact student motivation and participation, actual and perceived learning, course and instructor satisfaction, and retention in online courses; yet very few researchers have attempted to look across contexts, disciplinary areas, or measures of social presence. This meta-analysis allowed us to look across these variables of the primary studies and identify the pattern of student outcomes (e.g., perceived learning and satisfaction) in relation to social presence through scrutiny of differences between the studies. The results showed a moderately large positive average correlation between social presence and satisfaction (r = 0.56, k = 26) and social presence and perceived learning (r = 0.51, k = 26). Large variation among correlations (86.7% for satisfaction and 92.8% for perceived learning, respectively) also indicated systematic differences among these correlations due to online course settings. We found that (a) the strength of the relationship between social presence and satisfaction was moderated by the course length, discipline area, and scale used to measure social presence; and (b) the relationship between social presence and perceived learning was moderated by the course length, discipline area, and target audience of the course. Implications and future research are discussed.
Elsevier
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