ABSTRACT
One of the core challenges in self-paced online teaching and learning is a decline in learner engagement – the amount, type, and intensity of investments that students make in relation to accessing, reading and learning from materials posted by facilitators during self-paced learning sessions. At Hamdan Bin Mohammed Smart University (HBMSU), Dubai, United Arab Emirates, a policy of mandating assessment of engagement with self-paced classes was trialled between 2016 and 2017, with penalties ranging from loss of 0.5 mark per class to dismissal from courses for four failed self-paced assignment assessments. The policy led to significant access to course materials by learners taking two analysed health courses compared with engagement with self-paced classes in the same courses prior to introduction of the policy. Only 10 of 57 students accessed all posted learning materials during the review period. However, there was no significant difference in the performance by a minority of learners who consistently accessed all study materials in self-paced weeks compared with learners who selectively accessed some of the course materials during self-paced weeks. A survey of the minority group of 10 learners who accessed all learning materials revealed important insights on the facilitators and impediments to self-study for engaged learning.
Disclosure statement
The authors report no conflict of interest and no financial benefit of interest related to this study.
Additional information
Notes on contributors
Niyi Awofeso
Niyi Awofeso (PhD, Health Administration) is currently a Professor at the School of Health and Environmental Studies, Hamdan Bin Mohammed Smart University, Dubai, UAE. He has academic and professional backgrounds in Medicine, Public Health, Management of Disease Control programs, and Hospital Management. He has been involved with Open and Distance learning activities since 2009, and currently teaches three online courses every semester. [email protected]
Zahour Al Haj Rabih
Zahour Al Haj Rabih is a BSc Health Administration graduate from Hamdan Bin Mohammed Smart University, an active researcher, and the author of two journal articles in well-regarded peer-reviewed journals. [email protected]