ASYNCHRONOUS
DISCUSSION IN SUPPORT OF MEDICAL EDUCATION
Martin Oliver
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Department of Education and Professional Development
University College London
London, WB1E 6BT, England
Tel: +44 20 7679 1905
email: martin.oliver@ucl.ac.uk
Graham P. Shaw
Barry University
School of Natural and Health Sciences and School of Graduate Medical Sciences
11300 Northeast Second Avenue
Miami Shores, FL 33161-6695. U.S.A.
Tel: 305-899-3207
Fax: 305-899-3383
email: gshaw@mail.barry.edu
ABSTRACT
Although the potential of asynchronous discussion to support learning
is widely recognized, student engagement remains problematic. Often, for
example, students simply refuse to participate. Consequently the rich
promise of asynchronous learning networks for supporting students’
learning can prove hard to achieve.
After reviewing strategies for encouraging student participation in discussions
in Asynchronous Learning Networks (ALN), we present a study that investigates
how these strategies influenced students’ perceptions and use of
the discussion area. We identify and explore factors that encouraged and
inhibited student participation in asynchronous discussion, and evaluate
student postings to an asynchronous discussion group by content analysis.
The results question received wisdom about some of the pedagogic techniques
advocated in the literature. Instead, results support the view that the
major factors for stimulating student participation in asynchronous discussion
are tutor enthusiasm and expertise. It appears that the tutor may be the
root cause of engagement in discussions, an important conclusion, given
that to date, the tutor’s role has remained relatively unexamined.
We also note that participation in asynchronous discussion is inhibited
when students allocate a low priority to participation, as may occur when
participation is not assessed.
Content analysis of an asynchronous discussion in this study reveals
that contributions were not strongly interactive and that students were
simply ‘playing the game’ of assessment, making postings that
earned marks but rarely contributing otherwise. Thus the use of assessment
to encourage students’ contributions appears to be only a superficial
success; it seems likely that giving credit for postings changes behavior
without necessarily improving learning. This finding has significant implications
for curriculum design.
KEY WORDS
ynchronous discussion, Tutor, Assessment, Learning effectiveness, Student
satisfaction
I. INTRODUCTION
The potential of asynchronous discussion to support learning is widely
recognized. However, learning benefits are not inherent in the technology,
but depend upon collaborative activities. Thus, for example, improvements
in the quality of learning may be more likely if students actively participate
in interactive online learning, if the tutor adopts a collaborative pedagogic
strategy, and if students participate in a collaborative assignment [1].
Key to such recommendations is engagement in discussions in an asynchronous
learning network.
Despite the fact that students’ participation in asynchronous discussion
is vital to maintaining interest, motivation, and engagement in active
learning, participation remains problematic. Consequently, promoting discourse
has become a major role of the e-moderator [2].
In this section, existing research on strategies for encouraging student
participation in Asynchronous Learning Networks will be reviewed.
A. Using asynchronous discussion to support learning
Mason [3] and others, for example,
Paulsen [4], advocate the primary role of the e-moderator
as providing a friendly, social environment where effective learning can
take place. These writers adopt what might be referred to as pedagogic
determinism, proposing that “sensitive and appropriate conference
design and the e-moderator’s intervention cause the socializing
to occur.” From this position, a number of techniques or models
have been proposed, each of which attempts to specify what an appropriate
design and form of intervention ought to be. Warren and Rada, for example,
suggest that:
… for participants to gain from and sustain
potential benefits of online interaction, (a) they must begin contributing
to collaborative learning immediately at the start of a virtual course;
(b) the tutor must be involved as facilitator, encourager, structure
provider and resource; (c) interaction must be required, structured
and graded; and (d) participants must be ‘mature, motivated learners’…
They must also (a) share an interest and commitment to a well-defined
task, (b) have ease of access to a reliable computer network, (c) feel
a sense of responsibility to the group, (d) experience strong leadership
and anticipate a final evaluation of the group task [5].
Salmon proposes an even more detailed five-stage model
for what she calls e-moderating, which also takes into account the idea
that the nature of communication may change at different points during
a course [6].
In spite of guidelines such as these, studies show that the implementation
of ALN-based discussion remains problematic. In some cases, for example,
students simply refuse to participate.
No matter what I did, I could not get students to use the VC (virtual
classroom). I sent them reminders that it was required. They would say,
“I don’t know how”. I would send them a message on
how to do it, they would say, “I don’t have an account…..”
Instructor A: Hiltz et al, [1]
A lack of participation may result from one of any number of reasons,
including technical problems [7], limited access
to a computer [8], feeling lost in the discussion,
falling ‘too far’ behind the discussion [8,
9], a lack of confidence or understanding [10],
not having mastered the medium or specialist language of a particular
forum, or simply being a ‘freeloader’ [6].
Each of these might be seen as a challenge to overcome. However, there
is also what might be described as dilemmas, problems for which there
simply does not seem to be a ‘right’ answer. For example,
communication tools may be poorly used unless the tutor facilitates discussion;
yet at the same time, the tutor’s presence in discussion forums
can stifle student participation [7]. Such complexities,
and their influence on learning, are yet to be fully understood.
It should also be noted that students’ non-participation in asynchronous
discussion might not be such a bad thing [10],
since they can learn a considerable amount simply from observing a dialogue
[11].
B. The influence of assessment on participation
One particularly influential element of pedagogy recurs
in the literature on ALNs: assessment. Warren and Rada conclude that grading
contributions was one cause of increased postings [5].
However, Jones’ ethnographic study vividly illustrates the pitfalls
that can arise when using assessment to stimulate participation [12].
The course he describes explicitly encouraged online collaboration, and
credit was given for such activities. As part of this study, he observed
a group of students meet face-to-face in a computer lab; they then created
a series of emails to each other, based on prepared notes, in order to
maximize their marks. This example shows how students learn how to play
the game of assessment, and how drastically it can distort their behavior.
In contrast, Beaudin’s study of online tutors questions the centrality
of assessment, suggesting that it may be a relatively unimportant strategy
in terms of keeping discussion on-topic [13].
Respondents believed assessment to be less influential than, for example,
carefully designed questions, providing guidelines for learners, or rewording
questions, particularly for tutors who had taught five or more online
courses in the last three years. However, interestingly, he also raises
the possibility that the differences in perceived importance may also
suggest that experienced tutors are more realistic than relative novices
about the value of such techniques in keeping discussions on-topic, concluding
that further studies might be required to understand what these tutors
actually do.
C. Summary
The rich promise of ALNs for supporting students’
learning may prove hard to achieve. It cannot be assumed that provision
of a technological infrastructure will somehow cause collaboration and
learning to take place. However, various factors seem to influence whether
or not students engage in asynchronous discussions, ranging from the pragmatic
(for example, easy access) to the pedagogic (for example, the influence
of assessment). The remainder of this paper describes a study in which
the students’ views on the relative importance of different factors
were analyzed in relation to their actual participation in a range of
discussion forums.
II. METHODS
A. The educational context of this study
The California College of Podiatric Medicine is a private, non-profit
organization previously based in Vallejo, California.
The Podiatric curriculum is consistent with that of the majority of other
medical schools and places significant demands on student time. Furthermore,
because course examinations are routinely scheduled on Monday mornings,
the precise time (over the weekend) when students needed faculty support
the most was the time when they were most inaccessible.
During the spring semester of 2000, full time faculty in the department
of basic medical sciences were given the opportunity to support their
respective courses with a variety of asynchronous learning networks in
an effort to enhance faculty-student collaboration. In addition to a discussion
group, in which subject-based interaction between faculty and students
and between students could take place, faculty were able to establish
discussion groups to share mnemonics or to make course-related postings
and administrative changes in a Notices forum. With the exception of the
author (Graham Shaw), this was the first exposure of faculty to asynchronous
learning environments in support of medical education. Adoption of this
technology was not made compulsory.
All courses were delivered using a traditional lecture or lecture/laboratory
paradigm. The asynchronous learning environments were designed to run
alongside lectures and laboratories and to promote interpersonal interactions
between students and between faculty and students independent of place
and time. Student participation in the various asynchronous learning environments
was not compulsory initially; though, in an attempt to stimulate participation
in the Biochemistry environment, credit was given for posting an assignment
summary toward the end of the semester.
At the start of the semester the students were given an introduction
to the asynchronous learning environment that included an online demonstration
of the technology and clear written guidelines as to its use. In order
to use the learning environment, students were required to register as
a new user by completing a short online registration form and thereafter
access was by username and password. Within the Biochemistry conference
students were able to post a message, reply, delete, or ‘post a
new topic’. The Biochemistry conference was a closed learning environment
visible only to the students in the course and to the course tutor. Student
postings to the conference were not screened. The other discussion boards
were open, allowing all registered students to view and post messages.
The conference starts with a ‘Welcome’ message posted by
the Biochemistry moderator. In this message the moderator adopts a friendly,
personal tone as advocated by Mason, encouraging participation [3].
Since this is the students’ first interaction with ALNs, the moderator
uses a ‘light hearted’ exercise to start and invites student
contributions on the topic of Christmas holidays.
B. Student cohort
The class of 2003 is composed of 67 students (72% male, 28% female).
White students constitute the majority (70%) with the remainder composed
of African American (4%), Asian (18%), Hispanic/ Mexican American/Puerto
Rican (4%), and Native American (4%).
75% of students responded to the questionnaire; their academic backgrounds
are shown in Table 1.

Table 1: An overview of the
cohort’s academic information
C. Questionnaire
A questionnaire was distributed to all the students in the class of 2003
after completing Biochemistry, Physiology, Human Anatomy, Lower Extremity
Anatomy, and Neuroscience courses in the spring semester of 2000. Total
time for administering the questionnaire was 15 minutes. Time is significant
since longer questionnaires may be less reliable due to respondent fatigue
[14]. Only Biochemistry, Human Anatomy and Lower
Extremity Anatomy courses were supported by distinct asynchronous learning
networks; faculty responsible for neuroscience and physiology courses
chose not to take advantage of the asynchronous learning opportunity.
Within the questionnaire, in addition to basic demographic data such
as gender and grade point average (GPA) on entry, students were asked
to categorise their familiarity with using computers and the Internet
and how many messages they contributed to each discussion board. They
were also given a list of things that might have encouraged or prevented
their participation, drawn from the themes identified in the literature,
and asked to say how important each of these had been in influencing their
engagement with the discussion. Students were also asked to rate how important
each board had been in helping them to understand the topic, and to improve
their scores for the course. Finally, students were invited to give feedback
on the course.
D. Content analysis
In addition to the survey, one cohort’s postings to an asynchronous
discussion forum were analysed. The issue of how best to analyse such
postings is widely debated; however, content analysis is frequently advocated
as being suitable for such tasks [15]. This study
was influenced by the work of Pilkington and others on dialogue, which
concentrates on the interaction of particular types of ‘moves’
in conversations [7]. In practice, the structure
of discussions that arose gave little opportunity for sustained conversations
to be analyzed in this way; consequently, the data were classified into
fairly broad categories (discussions of the subject and the course, or
discussions of other issues, including technical problems) and then sub-classified
according to their status as conversational moves. This involved deciding
whether a posting was a question, a self-contained statement, or a response.
Responses were further sub-divided into ‘response: answer,’
‘response: additional question,’ ‘response: answer and
additional question,’ and ‘response: statement.’ Those
responses which ended with a question invited further contributions to
that particular conversational thread; those which were classified as
answers attempted to provide a ‘correct’ response that would
end the thread. ‘Response: statements’ offered opinions which
were not integrated into the discussion; they were effectively asides
from the conversation, and often simply indicated a person’s opinion
on a topic in a way that did not invite response.
This classification enabled a more detailed investigation of how the
students acted in an online discussion, and a judgement of whether or
not this engagement was particularly constructive. It also allowed issues
of the reliability of students’ responses to be investigated.
While the technology used to support each asynchronous learning environment
remained the same, the topics and pedagogies varied. The following asynchronous
learning networks provide the data for this study: Biochemistry, Lower
Extremity Anatomy Discussion, Lower Extremity Anatomy Notices, Human Anatomy
Notices, Human Anatomy Discussion, and Human Anatomy Mnemonics.
III. RESULTS
Table 2 shows an overview of the 224 messages posted to the discussion
forum during the term.

Table 2: An overview of message
postings from the cohort
These levels of response fall slightly below those observed by Morris
and others, who observed approximately 3 replies to every original message
[16]. In this study, the level is around 2 replies
per original message.
A. Students' attitudes towards the context for
discussion
A primary aim for this study was to examine what students
felt was important in encouraging them to contribute to the discussion,
or what prevented their engagement. For each of these, students were offered
five statements, modelled on issues in the literature, and asked to rate
their importance using a 5-point Likert scale, with 1 as the weakest agreement
and 5 as the strongest. There were 60 responses to the questionnaire (90%).
Of these responses, 43 (71%) were male, and the average GPA score was
3.36, suggesting that the respondents were representative of the class
as a whole. The results are summarized in Table 3.

Table 3: What students felt
was important in influencing their contributions to discussions
This descriptive analysis suggests that few of these issues are particularly
important in influencing students’ contributions to discussions.
Although a few items had a median of three, only one had a mode above
1. Thus the only item that particularly stands out concerns the tutor’s
enthusiasm.
Other items seem to have had some small impact include students’
priorities: that they felt they didn’t have enough time and didn’t
think this would be particularly helpful, that this represented another
avenue for questioning the tutor, and that contribution was assessed.
The only noteworthy disincentive appears to be a general lack of time
to participate. Rather than taking lack of time at face value, however,
it may be more appropriate to interpret this as signifying that the non-compulsory
nature of participation may have led students to allocate a low priority
to participation (cf. Morris and others [16]).
Analytically, there seemed to be no difference in terms of attitudes
between genders (although there was a slight trend for men to be more
reluctant than women to share their resources: Mann Whitney U, n=60, p<0.076).
However, students whose GPA on entry was below the class average felt
more likely to contribute if they had the option of doing so anonymously
(Mann Whitney U: n=60, p<0.042), and were more likely to feel that
they had nothing to contribute to the discussion (Mann Whitney U: n=60,
p<0.011). There was also a trend suggesting that students with a lower
GPA than the class average were more likely to perceive the discussion
forum as a ‘bolt on’ rather than an integral part of the course
(Mann Whitney U:, n=60, p<0.061), suggesting that they were less clear
about its pedagogic role.
Others indicators of students’ attitudes were drawn from the correlation
of students’ self-reported number of postings on each of the four
bulletin boards to which they had posting rights, and how helpful they
felt that each board had been in terms of both improving their understanding
and improving their scores. Perhaps unsurprisingly, there was a significant
correlation with each of the sets of data between the extent to which
students felt the board improved their understanding, and the extent to
which it helped them improve their scores (Pearson: 1-tailed, n=60, p<0.01).
Slightly less clear-cut, but perhaps more interesting, are the relationships
between students’ self-reported contribution to a board and its
perceived usefulness. The following significant correlations emerged (Pearson:
1-tailed, n=60, p<0.05):

Table 4: Correlations between
self-reported postings, understanding and scores
For the bulletin board that forms the focus for this study, Biochemistry,
there was no relationship between whether or not students contributed
messages and any perceived improvement in understanding or scores. This
provides some support for the claim that lurkers are not necessarily disadvantaged
by their behavior. However, the picture seems markedly different for the
other two courses, Human Anatomy and Lower Extremity Anatomy, raising
the question of how use of these discussion areas differed. Understanding
seemed to be linked to contribution for the Lower Extremity Anatomy courses,
and scores appear to be linked to participation in Human Anatomy. This
suggests that the influence here lay in the tutors’ pedagogic use
of the boards, rather than the technology, which remained the same).
B. Requests for further resources
In addition to the closed items on the questionnaires, students were
invited to say what further resources might be useful to support their
learning. Most responses concerned information management issues, such
as:
• Links to other sites on this topic (6)
• Downloadable copies of slides and handouts (4)
• Copies of past assessments (2)
• Formative self-assessment exercises (4)
• A course syllabus (2)
• Pictures, illustrations and videos used in the course (6)
• Information on administrative issues for the course (1)
• A study guide (1)
However, one student requested a social discussion forum for students
on the course, and another took this opportunity to complain that the
bulletin board was unusable because the volume of messages was overwhelming.
C. The influence of the tutor
It is interesting to consider the characteristics of each tutor and how
the ALN was integrated into each course. The Biochemistry discussion was
moderated by a tutor with previous e-moderating experience, considerable
enthusiasm for the media and an appreciation of the learning benefits
of ALNs. Within the Biochemistry course, continual reference was made
to the discussion group throughout the program in class time, and students
were encouraged to take an active/interactive role in their own learning.
In addition, the class was directed to the asynchronous discussion forum
in order to take advantage of learning resources such as websites posted
by their peers. These resources were not available elsewhere and gave
the discussion group some added value. It was hoped that this would stimulate
student interest in the media. Toward the end of the Biochemistry program
as interest in the discussion board was waning, the tutor suggested to
the class that additional credit could be obtained for posting a paper
summary to the discussion board in an effort to promote interaction with
the medium.
Lower Extremity Anatomy was taught by an experienced traditional tutor
with no previous experience of ALNs. This tutor was prepared to embrace
the technology and was receptive to the advantages of the media. Given
the intensity of the Podiatric program and the high proportion of ‘in
class’ hours this tutor was prepared to utilize ALNs to facilitate
‘anywhere-anytime’ learning providing that it was student-led.
The tutor made announcements regarding the existence of the asynchronous
discussion forum in class time and informed the students of the need for
them to take an active role in its use.
The technology is in place and if the students want to use it to explore
more in-depth aspects of the course outside of class time I am happy
to respond, though these interactions should be initiated by the student.
Human Anatomy was taught by a very experienced traditional tutor with
no prior experience of ALNs. He was very enthusiastic about the potential
of the technology to enhance student-faculty interaction and referred
to the existence of the discussion board repeatedly during the early stages
of the course, occasionally posting messages during this period.
Two faculty in the department of Basic Medical Sciences did not utilize
ALN, citing workload and contentment with operations currently in place
as inhibiting factors. Shifter reports that non-participating faculty
most commonly cite lack of technical support provided by the institution
and concern about the quality of courses before faculty workload as inhibiting
factors [17]. Interestingly both these faculty
rated their enthusiasm for the technology as moderate, on a Likert scale
from very high to very low.
IV. DISCUSSION
The findings summarised above suggest that the forum was not strongly
interactive, in spite of the fact that all common recommendations for
encouraging debate had been followed. Indeed, a high proportion of the
postings were made by the tutor. This is far from a unique phenomenon.
The online CHAT was a strongly tutor-led discussion. From a total
of 9831 words and 664 turns over eight analysed seminars the tutor produced
4487 words and 248 turns. This represents 46% of words and 37% of turns.
One full-time International Student and two Home students accounted
for another 3638 words and 284 turns between them - leaving just 17%
of the word total (15% of turns) to the remaining students [7].
The only contextual element that appeared to influence engagement in
any important way was the tutor. Comparisons across courses suggest that
different pedagogic applications of this technology influenced the link
between contribution to discussion areas and learning (Table 4). Although
one possible interpretation is that the other boards were more effective
in using contributions to foster learning, it is equally feasible and
more credible to interpret this result as indicating that only the more
able students contributed to the discussion boards on other courses, as
they often do in the classroom, whereas a broader range of students contributed
on the Biochemistry board. This suggests that the techniques used in the
Biochemistry board were relatively effective in encouraging student participation,
even though the students were not particularly aware of the influence
of these techniques on their contributions (Table 3).
One distinctive feature of the pattern of postings was that students
were ‘playing the game’ of assessment, making the posting
that earned them marks but rarely contributing otherwise. The single biggest
category of postings, the ‘statements’ from named students,
was almost exclusively comprised of the project descriptions requested
by the tutor as a for-credit part of the assessment process. This reinforces
the observations of Jones [12], where assessment
led to students consciously engaging in behaviors designed to maximise
their performance. It also resembles the finding of Morris and others
[16] that “most course-content-related conference
postings were assignment focused.”
The other distinctive feature of this course, identified through a discussion
of the role of the tutors and the feedback of the students, was the enthusiasm
and expertise of the tutor. This suggests that it may be this personal,
affective element of the students’ context that fostered engagement.
Mason’s work supports this observation, reporting that the commitment,
passion, involvement and absorption of the tutor in the online discussion
is even more import than e-moderating skill in influencing the success
of the conference [3]. Similarly, Kerr notes that
a lack of adequate leadership is a major factor in the failure of such
conferences, since a clear agenda for participants to follow and goals
to aim for are needed if anything is to happen [18].
Another important feature, not directly highlighted by the findings,
concerns the introduction of this technology. All students involved in
this study had already completed one semester of medical education. As
found in the very similar context of the study by Morris and others [16],
the addition of new media to the course confounds students’ expectations,
and can lead to low levels of use, particularly if the students’
first engagement with this new technology is frustrating [19].
V. CONCLUSION
The study described in this paper has demonstrated the feasibility of
supporting courses in medical education using ALNs. However, more importantly,
the study has called into question a number of assumptions that are frequently
made about the reasons why such use of ALNs are successful.
The use of assessment to encourage student discourse appears to be only
a superficial success. The findings here that students perform to criteria
without necessarily engaging in worthwhile dialogue are supported by others
[12]. Thus unless more sophisticated assessment
criteria can be developed, it seems likely that giving credit for postings
will change behavior without necessarily improving learning. There was
even less evidence that the other pedagogic techniques used here benefit
learners. As Jones says, “collaboration is shown to be in some sense
the problem for networked learning not an outcome of the new technology
or its associated pedagogy” (emphasis added) [20].
While many papers draw conclusions about techniques that influence students’
engagement, the affective role of the tutor has remained relatively unexamined.
This study suggests that whether or not the recommended techniques influence
learning, the tutor has an important role to play. Attention to techniques
alone is insufficient; tutors are not some confounding variable modifying
the effectiveness of particular pedagogic approaches, but may instead
be the root cause of engagement in discussions.
Thus, ironically, attention to both technology and pedagogy in studies
of this type may be misplaced, or at the least, inadequate. What is required
is an increased focus on the affective role of the tutor, in recognition
of the realisation in the wider field of research into Higher Education
that their enthusiasm stimulates students, communicating a love of the
subject, medium and of learning [21].
VI. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The authors appreciate the cooperation of the students and faculty of
the Department of Basic Medical Sciences at the California College of
Podiatric Medicine. We thank Jim Cole for his technical expertise, and
thank Jared Remmers, CCPM class of 2003 for his organizational skills
and dedication to research at CCPM.
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VIII. ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Graham Shaw received his Ph.D. from Aston University
in 1983. He spent 10 years as a senior lecturer in the school of Health
and Sports Science at the University of North London before moving to
The California College of Podiatric Medicine in 1999. In 2002, he joined
the faculty at Barry University in Florida. He is an active member of
The Society of General Microbiology and The British Society of Gastroenterology
and the American Society of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. His research
interests centre on the role of Helicobacter pylori in peptic
ulcer disease and the impact of computers and information technology in
higher education.
Barry University, School of Natural and Health Sciences and School of
Graduate Medical Sciences, 11300 Northeast Second Avenue, Miami Shores,
FL 33161-6695. U.S.A.
Phone: 305-899-3207
Fax: 305-899-3383
Email: gshaw@mail.barry.edu
Martin Oliver is a lecturer in the use of computers
to support learning and teaching in higher education. His research interests
include evaluation, curriculum design, the theory of learning technology
and the relationship between roles and practice.
Department of Education and Professional Development, University College
London,
London, WB1E 6BT, England.
Tel: +44 20 7679 1905,
Email: martin.oliver@ucl.ac.uk
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