Instructor Social Presence: Learners' Needs and a Neglected Component of the Community of Inquiry Framework

Jennier C. Richardson, Patrick Lowenthal

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingChapter

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Abstract

Social presence theory was the term first proposed in 1976 to explain how telecommunications influence how people communicate (Short, Williams, & Christie, 1976). Short and colleagues (1976) defined social presence as the degree of salience (i.e., quality or state of being there) between two communicators using a communication medium. This theory became particularly important for online educators trying to understand how people communicated in primarily text-based online courses during the 1990s (Lowenthal, 2009). In fact, social presence was identified as one of the core elements of the Community of Inquiry (CoI) framework, a widely used guide for planning, developing, evaluating, and researching online learning (Boston et al., 2011; Kumar & Ritzhaupt, 2014; Swan, Day, Bogle, & Matthews, 2014). The CoI framework is a dynamic process model of online learning based on the theory that effective learning requires a community based on inquiry (Garrison, 2011,2015). At the heart of the model are the interdependent constructs of cognitive, social, and teaching presence (Swan, Garrison, & Richardson, 2009). Social presence, the first element, is the ability of participants "to project their personal characteristics into the community, thereby presenting themselves to other participants as 'real people'" (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2000, p. 89). The second element, teaching presence, involves instructional management, building understanding, and direct instruction. And the third element, cognitive presence, is "the extent to which the participants in...a community of inquiry are able to construct meaning through sustained communication" (Garrison et al., 2000, p. 89).

Original languageAmerican English
Title of host publicationSocial Presence in Online Learning
Subtitle of host publicationMultiple Perspectives on Practice and Research
EditorsAimee L. Whiteside, Amy Garrett Dikkers, Karen Swan
PublisherRoutledge
Chapter9
Pages32-44
Number of pages15
Edition1st
ISBN (Electronic)9781003447023
ISBN (Print)9781620365090
StatePublished - 2017

EGS Disciplines

  • Instructional Media Design

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