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2014 CALL Conference
LINGUAPOLIS
www.antwerpcall.be
With higher education increasingly delivered in blended learning
modes that are both
offline and online (Amhag & Jakobsson, 2009; Lee, 2009), it is necessary to investigate
whether critical thinking is present in online learning contexts. This is called a search for
“transversal relationships” (Kern, 2006, p. 202), which is an investigation of the
transferability of a learning skill from one communicative modality and context to
another.
Email, asynchronous discussion forums, blogs, and wikis are among the online tools used
to complement face-to-face classrooms. Asynchronous discussion forums (ADFs), in
particular, are used frequently (Amhag & Jakobsson, 2009; Dringus & Ellis, 2010)
because they are text-based and deemed suitable for
serious academic discussion
(Motteram, 2001). Learners’ engagement in asynchronous online discussions is a form of
computer-supported group-mediated collaborative activity in which an electronic medium
is used (Deloach & Greenlaw, 2005). ADFs are proposed to have the potential to take
discussions to a more critical stage. This is because, through online discussions, students
can create a discourse community where they negotiate with one another in an extended
period of time. Such negotiations can lead to cognitive conflict, which in turn, can trigger
exploratory talk (Song, 2008). Moreover, ADFs provide a platform for expressing multiple
perspectives, negotiating meaning, understanding knowledge
gaps and resolving issues
(Haavind, 2006; Land, Choi, & Ge, 2007). Therefore, due to the specific features of ADFs,
it is proposed that students can benefit from extended learner-learner interactions in
ways not feasible in face-to-face classrooms (Ling, 2007).
There is a vast body of research on the potential of ADFs for fostering tertiary level
students’ critical thinking (e.g. Lee, 2009; McLoughlin & Mynard, 2009; Richardson & Ice,
2010). However, there are three key gaps in the literature that should be addressed.
Firstly, previous research has mainly focused on individual critical thinking; the
investigation of critical thinking when a group works
together has been generally
overlooked. Secondly, few studies have investigated critical thinking processes of the
individual and of the group in a single study, to present
a comprehensive picture of
collaborative critical thinking. Finally, in previous studies of critical thinking on ADFs, ESL
students have been generally overlooked despite the fact that the increase in the number
of international students for whom English is a second/foreign language has made
classrooms increasingly multicultural.
To address these gaps, I examined the demonstration of collaborative critical thinking
(CCT) on ADFs in a multicultural higher education learning context.
The scope of this
research was limited to a graduate blended subject over two 12-week periods at an
Australian research university. I investigated the demonstration of CCT as students
discussed topics on 10 weekly ADFs over the course of the semester. The three proposed
research questions were:
Is there evidence of CCT on ADFs in a graduate level subject?
Do NS students and ESL students differ in their demonstration of CCT on ADFs in a
graduate level subject? If so, How?
What factors affect the demonstration of CCT on ADFs in a graduate level subject?
In this paper,
I discuss the
ontological
and
methodological
challenges encountered in
conducting the above research.
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