Item – Theses Canada

OCLC number
694904103
Link(s) to full text
LAC copy
Author
Kelland, Jennifer Helene.
Title
Mixing personal and learning lives : how women mediate tensions when learning online
Degree
Ph. D. -- University of Alberta, 2011
Publisher
Edmonton, Alta. : University of Alberta, 2011.
Description
1 online resource
Notes
"A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Graduate Studies and Research in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Adult Education, Educational Policy Studies, University of Alberta."
Title from pdf file main screen (viewed Jan. 4, 2011).
Includes bibliographical references.
Abstract
Current statistics suggest women form the majority of online learners. Their enrollment levels may be a result of promotional materials suggesting online learning allows learners access to flexible learning opportunities that will complement their busy lives. This research questions those assertions by examining the tensions women experience while learning online. Using a poststructural feminist approach, tensions are defined as the messy spaces where complexities, contradictions and competing ideas, actions, expectations, values and emotions interact to produce opposition and opportunities. Research questions asks: How do women learning online mediate tensions in the learning environment and in their own personal context? What tensions do women face when learning online? What strategies do they use to address these tensions? Are they able to find ways to balance or overcome these tensions? A poststructural feminist theoretical framework acknowledges the diversity of women's experiences and allows space for questioning discourse around lifelong learning, online learning, women's responsibilities, and institutional authority. Data was collected using multiple methods: photo-elicitation interviews and an online focus group plus a demographic survey and autoethnography. Twelve women, who all completed at least two online courses, participated representing learners of different ages, marital and family situations, geographical locations, and level and field of study. Six women took photographs, which formed the basis of face-to-face interviews. Six other women participated in an asynchronous online focus group. Themes from the results showed the tensions they experience, namely, the blurring between the boundaries between home and school, the cost of flexibility, and three strategies they used for mediating tensions (multitasking, procrastinating and persevering). While the women acknowledged the benefits of online learning and demonstrated that they were successful students, their narratives make it clear that they faced challenges in attending to and completing their schoolwork to the standards they desired, while meeting family and work responsibilities. A theoretical analysis explores how the poststructural feminist concepts of positionality and subjectivity are useful in examining women's experiences learning online and where there are gaps in applying this theoretical framework in online learning contexts. Participants' narratives and photographs and the researcher's own autobiographical narrative are included.
Other link(s)
Free Access
hdl.handle.net
era.library.ualberta.ca
Subject
Women college students Alberta Attitudes.
Web-based instruction.
Étudiantes Alberta Attitudes.