2009
DOI: 10.28945/75
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Open the Windows of Communication: Promoting Interpersonal and Group Interactions Using Blogs in Higher Education

Abstract: Using educational blogs enriches online learning by creating a peer dialogue in the form of a reader response or a peer-blogger-peer feedback sequence. The present study explores interpersonal and group interactions in an academic course using blogs. The findings show that, as predicted by the theory of electronic propinquity (TEP), the feeling of nearness transmitted by students via blog posts interacted with different behavior variables (i.e., choosing post content-type, calling for feedback, responding to p… Show more

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Cited by 20 publications
(11 citation statements)
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“…The use of these applications is immersing and might stimulate the participant IA. Self-disclosure is a built in feature of these tools and it is essential for a successful blogger (Blau, Mor, & Neuthal, 2009), Twitter, or avatar owner, as well as for users publishing their photos on the net or showing their real face to others during the video chat sessions. Using applications such as Facebook, messenger, YouTube, and watching TV shows online was related only to IA, but not to selfdisclosure.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The use of these applications is immersing and might stimulate the participant IA. Self-disclosure is a built in feature of these tools and it is essential for a successful blogger (Blau, Mor, & Neuthal, 2009), Twitter, or avatar owner, as well as for users publishing their photos on the net or showing their real face to others during the video chat sessions. Using applications such as Facebook, messenger, YouTube, and watching TV shows online was related only to IA, but not to selfdisclosure.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Weekly topics ranged from self-identifying their own social class based on the criteria outlined in the book to analyzing the plight of immigrant workers. Blogs, short for Web logs, have already been identified as a medium for enabling interactions that might not happen in a traditional classroom (Ellison & Wu, 2008), offering opportunities for student independence and deeper interaction with peers (Blau, Mor, & Neuthal, 2009;Williams & Jacobs, 2004). A survey of students using blogs in their coursework (Ercan, 2011) has indicated positive feelings of collaborative learning and perceived learning, as well as moderate feelings related to the sense of community.…”
Section: The Activitymentioning
confidence: 96%
“…These tasks require much more effort from both the students and the instructors. The main collaborative online tools are wikis (Wheeler, Yeomans, & Wheeler, 2008), blogs (Blau, Mor, & Neuthal, 2009), and GoogleDocs (Caspi & Blau, 2011;Rimor, Rosen, & Naser, 2010).…”
Section: Theoretical Context: Social Interaction In Distance Learningmentioning
confidence: 99%