Author:
Duterte Junard,Importante Gilbert
Abstract
AbstractDuring the coronavirus pandemic, scholars study how learners pursue lifelong learning in open and distance education since few studies investigate this issue. This study aims to discover a learning model that would increase the students’ online learning engagement and course completion in Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs). Adopting the Self-Regulation Theory (SRT) on andragogy, this study is administered to 290 Massive MOOC adult learners in the Davao region. The author aimed to identify the respondents’ level of self-regulation in online learning, determine their learning outputs in a MOOC, examine the relationship between their self-regulation and learning outputs, and ascertain the significant predictors of their learning outputs. This study applied a quantitative-correlational design in collecting, interpreting, and discussing data from surveys using an adapted questionnaire. The author treated the data through a multiple regression correlation test. The results reveal that the respondents’ level of self-regulation in MOOC was very high, and they attained an excellent level of learning outputs. Furthermore, the findings show a strong relationship between their self-regulation and learning outputs in MOOCs. Meta-cognition, time management, environmental structuring, help-seeking, and persistence were significant predictors of learning outputs as reflected in the learning model that emerged. Findings also highlighted that self-regulation could significantly predict the learning outputs of online learners in exploring the MOOCs for their personal and professional development.
Publisher
Atlantis Press International BV
Reference23 articles.
1. Meri-Yilan, S. (2020). The online interface and social inclusion: A MOOC study in Turkey. Journal of Interactive Media in Education, 2020(1).
2. Ahmed, S. S., Khan, E., Faisal, M., & Khan, S. (2017). The potential and challenges of MOOCs in Pakistan: A perspective of students and faculty. Asian Association of Open Universities Journal, 12(1), 94–105.
3. Aljaraideh, Y. (2019). Massive open online learning (MOOC) benefits and challenges: A case study in Jordanian context. International Journal of Instruction, 12(4), 65–78.
4. Trehan, S., Sanzgiri, J., Li, C., Wang, R., & Joshi, R. (2017). Critical discussions on the massive open online course (MOOC) in India and China. International Journal of Education and Development using ICT, 13(2).
5. Yang, Y., & Li, H. (2015). MOOC and advanced education reform in China. In Computational intelligence in industrial application, CIIA 2014: Proceedings of the 2014 Pacific-Asia workshop on computer science in industrial application, Singapore, 8–9 December 2014 (p. 171).