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Title Understanding Student Participation in Undergraduate Course Communities: A Case Study
Authors Francisco Gutierrez, Sergio Ochoa, Gustavo Zurita, Nelson Baloian
Publication date February 2016
Abstract Participation is the cornerstone of any community.
Promoting, understanding and properly managing it
allows not only keeping the community sustainable, but also providing
personalized services to its members and managers. This article presents a
case study in which student participation in a course community was
motivated using two different extrinsic mechanisms, and mediated by a
software platform. The results were compared with a baseline community of
the same course, in which participation was not motivated by external means.
The analysis of these results indicates that managing a partially virtual
course community requires the introduction of monitoring services, community
managers and extrinsic mechanisms to motivate participation. These findings
allow community managers to improve their capability for promoting
participation and keeping the community sustainable. The findings also raise
several implications that should be considered in the design of software
supporting this kind of community, when managing the participation of its
members
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Pages 7-21
Volume 18
Journal name Information Systems Frontiers
Publisher Springer (Netherlands)
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