|
Face-to-Face
Tutorials in a Distance Learning System: meeting student
needs
Fung,
Yvonne and Carr, Ronnie
Source:
Fung,
Yvonne and Carr, Ronnie 2000. "Face-to-Face Tutorials
in a Distance Learning System: meeting student needs."
Open Learning, Feb2000, Vol. 15 Issue 1, p35, 12p.
|
Abstract
Many distance
learning programmes include an element of face-to-face
tuition. This paper reports on a research project concerned
with various issues related to face-to-face tutorials
in the Open University of Hong Kong's distance education
system, including students' expectations of the benefits
they will gain; their reasons for attending; the approaches
they prefer; and their overall satisfaction with what
tutors actually provide. Some comparisons are drawn
between students in the university's different schools-and
the overall findings are compared with those reported
for distance learners in the West, in an effort to assess
the impact of cultural context on student attitudes
to tutorials. The research found that the Hong Kong
students' attendance at tutorials was very high compared
to that found in other similar studies, possibly reflecting
Hong Kong's geographical compactness, but also possibly
reflecting a preference for face-to-face meetings; that
the students looked for specific guidance and support
from tutors within a largely directive framework; that
even where the format of the tutorial departed from
the students' expectations, the students did not necessarily
give the tutorial a low evaluation, provided that it
was a fruitful experience; and that the cultural context
within which a distance education system operates affects
students' expectations and learning styles.[ABSTRACT
FROM AUTHOR]
For Full
Text: http://taylorandfrancis.metapress.com/link.asp?id=104650
|