Abstract
This study investigated how student effort and the course design influenced an online internship in China. A cohort of 95 postgraduate students became distance learners in a credit-bearing internship course due to COVID-19. The course leader applied the action learning framework to prompt student online collaboration and group inquiry. The framework assumes the importance of self-reliant learner autonomy in virtual internships. After the course, researchers analyzed the effects of self-directed learning with technology on a multidimensional community of inquiry in a virtual environment. The study also identified students’ narratives that explain how self-directed learning with technology interacted with three elements of virtual communities of inquiry: social, cognitive, and teaching. Findings explain how virtual internships can be facilitated through a community of inquiry model. Educators and practitioners may consider the model to demonstrate student-staff partnerships (Fitzgerald et al., 2020) to achieve quality transformation of internships from face-to-face mode to distance education.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 164112234 |
Pages (from-to) | 246 |
Number of pages | 266 |
Journal | Distance Education |
Volume | 44 |
Issue number | 2 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 May 2023 |
Keywords
- action learning
- community of inquiry (CoI)
- self-directed learning
- virtual internship