This paper examines how students use and perceive time when studying in distance education modes and what affects this perception of time and the reality of time. We examine 30 years of student involvement on distance and online education, their comments on both their learning experiences, and the technology requirements of distance education/online learning. Our University has been involved in distance education since its formation in 1974. The online technologies offer increasingly sophisticated and immersive experiences for our students, both on campus and off campus, but many of our students continue to complain of time squeeze, and fail to predict the time it will take them to complete our subjects. We research how the technologies we use for online learning are contributing to this time squeeze perception and the student's "real" time to learn. Research is drawn from both the Australian Bureau of Statistics and surveys of our students' experiences (we have 32,000 students online, with single online classes of over 1300 students), to examine student use and perceptions of their available time to study and how the technologies used in online learning affect this.
History
Title of proceedings
3rd Annual Hawaii International Conference on Education Conference Proceedings
Event
Hawaii International Conference on Education (3rd : 2005 : Honolulu, Hawaii)
Pagination
1 - 14
Publisher
Hawaii International Conference on Education
Location
Honolulu, Hawaii
Place of publication
Honolulu, T.H.
Start date
2005-01-04
End date
2005-01-07
ISSN
1541-5880
Language
eng
Notes
Reproduced with the specific permission of the copyright owner.
Publication classification
E1 Full written paper - refereed
Copyright notice
2005, Hawaii International Conference on Education