2014
DOI: 10.2304/elea.2014.11.1.5
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Community of Inquiry: Social Presence Revisited

Abstract: Social presence is a construct that has attracted the attention of many educational scholars involved in online collaborative learning settings wherein all the dialogue is happening through textbased asynchronous and synchronous communication channels. The social presence of the learning group members is associated with the degree of participation and social interaction amongst them and, as such, is therefore considered a critical variable for learning. The Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework defines social p… Show more

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Cited by 87 publications
(72 citation statements)
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References 42 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…Several studies have focused on the nature of social presence and the need to review the original definition. Kreijns, Van Acker, Vermeulen and van Buuren () argue that social presence should be divided into two constructs, namely social presence, or “the degree of ‘realness’ of the other in the communication,” and social space, described as the “degree to which social interpersonal relationships are salient” (Kreijns et al , , p. 5). Garrison and his colleagues have also admitted that “of the three presences, social presence has evolved the most from the original conceptualization.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several studies have focused on the nature of social presence and the need to review the original definition. Kreijns, Van Acker, Vermeulen and van Buuren () argue that social presence should be divided into two constructs, namely social presence, or “the degree of ‘realness’ of the other in the communication,” and social space, described as the “degree to which social interpersonal relationships are salient” (Kreijns et al , , p. 5). Garrison and his colleagues have also admitted that “of the three presences, social presence has evolved the most from the original conceptualization.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research suggests that there is a relationship between collaborative learning and social presence (Kreijns et al, 2014;So & Brush, 2008). The relationship is confirmed through this study since many of the students noted that in-class collaborative activities helped to establish a connection between the one another.…”
Section: Research Question #5: How Do Students Describe Social Presensupporting
confidence: 68%
“…When activities were designed to ensure students relied upon one another to achieve a common goal, students perceived higher social presence than when they did not have to rely upon one another. In accordance with Kreijns et al (2014), it was not the technology that assisted with students building high social presence but the design of the activities or the designed interactions that facilitated creating social presence among the students.…”
Section: Research Question #5: How Do Students Describe Social Presenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, mediating all communication, coordination and collaboration through online tools appears to result in suboptimal support of, in particular, the social interaction and the group dynamics among team members [1]. This can lower feelings of social presence [2] and can hamper cognitive processes. One solution is to provide group awareness to students as this might alleviate the problems encountered [3], i.e.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%