The purpose of this research was to identify various techniques recommended and used by online instructors for keeping online learners on topic during asynchronous discussion and to identify what factors affected selection. A thirty-seven item online questionnaire was developed and completed by 135 online instructors subscribing to an international distance education listserv. Thirteen techniques for keeping online asynchronous learners on topic were rated using a sixpoint Likert scale. The results of the study showed that online instructors rated the following as the top four techniques for keeping asynchronous online discussion on topic: 1) Carefully design questions that specifically elicit on-topic discussion, 2) provide guidelines to help online learners prepare on-topic responses, 3) reword the original question when responses are going in the wrong direction and 4) provide discussion summary on a regular basis. Experience, training and differences between what respondents recommended and used to keep online asynchronous discussion on topic produced statistically significant results at the 0.05 level.
Suggestions from adult education can improve the effectiveness of diabetes education programs. While information and knowledge are noted as important factors in diabetes education, the literature indicates that they are insufficient to insure improved treatment outcomes. Research suggests that addressing psychosocial variables can improve diabetes education effectiveness. Although there are a multitude of psychosocial variables, attitude is consistently identified as an important contributor to positive diabetes management. Practical suggestions from adult education are offered to improve the learner's attitude about diabetes, the learning process, and the instructor.
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