Affiliation:
1. University of Maine System
2. University of Maine at Presque Isle
Abstract
Abstract
Adult learners are a significant proportion of distance learners and many of these students are working mothers. Several instructional design models center the learner, and this requires understanding the learner needs, strengths, and context. There is a gap in the literature describing the experience of working mother students in distance education. To understand this experience, the researchers interviewed and observed six academically high-achieving working mother students as they participated in their distance education courses during the pandemic. A discourse analysis approach was utilized to analyze the data. This extreme sample revealed several strategies that these students use to be successful despite their challenges. The findings suggest that understanding the experiences of distance learners as they study in the home are important for effective course design. More specifically, working mothers face significant distractions in their study environments, but the cognitive load can be reduced by making use of their prior knowledge, scaffolding instruction, and encouraging social presence. Additional strategies from the literature that address these constructs are provided for instructors and instructional designers.
Publisher
Research Square Platform LLC
Reference110 articles.
1. A theory of adult intellectual development: Process, personality, interests, and knowledge;Ackerman PL;Intelligence,1996
2. Benefits from retrieval practice are greater for students with lower working memory capacity;Agarwal PK;Memory,2017
3. Overview and evolution of the ADDIE training system;Allen WC;Advances in Developing Human Resources,2006
4. Mapping beliefs about teaching to patterns of instruction within science, technology, engineering, and mathematics;Allendoerfer C;Teaching in Higher Education,2014
5. Creating social presence in online environments;Aragon SR;New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education,2003