Ammar Bahadur Singh's disputation

RIDE member Ammar Bahadur Singh has defended his thesis "Teaching and Learning in an Institutional Massive Open Online Course: Implications for Agency in Online Pedagogy" for the degree of PhD.

Ammar Bahadur Singh defends his thesis in an auditorium

Photo: Ingeborg Krange

The aim of this thesis was to examine joint teaching and learning activities, focusing on the role of digital technologies in mediating students' engagement in collective meaning-making processes. The goal was to understand how instructors' and students' agency are developed and enacted in both synchronous (online meetings) and asynchronous (discussion forums) contexts in an institutional massive open online course (MOOC). Three research questions were investigated:

i. How does instructor agency come into play when facilitating students' online collaborative learning activities?

ii. How does student agency unfold, and how is it mediated by technologies when students engage in online collaborative learning activities?

iii. How do instructor and student agency co-evolve, and why do they become so prominent in joint teaching and learning activities in online learning environments?

This thesis makes important contributions to revealing the processes of developing and enacting agency in and through collaborative meaning-making activities. First, it reveals that agency comes into play when instructors and students engage collaboratively in developing an understanding of target concepts. Second, it employs the cultural-historical theory to analyse joint meaning-making activities in online collaborative learning environments. This approach is innovative and shows the potential usefulness of the cultural-historical perspective in the analysis of online learning. Third, it offers a pedagogical framework called the OECT framework to organise and promote collaborative teaching and learning activities that nurture agency in online teaching and learning.

Main findings and conclusions:

The main findings are that collaborative meaning-making activities are unique resources for developing agency and that the mobilisation of digital resources expands the possibilities for this development. These contributions have implications for designing online teaching and learning environments where both instructors and students develop and enact their agency in advancing conceptual understanding.

Source: Public defence: Ammar Bahadur Singh - Department of Education (uio.no)

Tags: MOOCs, online pedagogy, collaborative learning By Sonja Nygaard-Joki
Published June 14, 2024 3:36 PM - Last modified June 14, 2024 3:36 PM