Laura Alderson Dissertation Final Defense

The College of Education announces the final Dissertation of

Laura Alderson

for the degree of Doctor of Education

November 7, 2017 at 1:00 pm / Virtual via Google Hangouts

Major Advisor: Deborah Lowther, PhD

Using Digital Tools to Achieve Connectedness in Higher Education Online Courses: Faculty Perceptions and Practices

ABSTRACT: This research examined higher education faculty perceptions and practices regarding the role of digital tools, specifically, social media and communication tools to achieve connectedness between the faculty member and students and among students in fully online courses. The study was guided by three research questions: 1) What are faculty perceptions of connectedness and its importance with regard to achieving connectedness? 2) In what ways do faculty use social media and/or communication tools in online courses to achieve connectedness? and 3) What do faculty report as key benefits and challenges to achieving connectedness in online courses? A qualitative, intrinsic case study approach and purposeful sampling were used to ensure relevant information would be obtained from five business college faculty who teach fully online courses and potentially used social media and communication tools in these courses. Data were collected using face-to-face semi-structured interviews, which were recorded and transcribed. Constant comparative analysis of data involved categorizing and sequencing of data to discover emerging themes as associated with the research questions. The findings suggest that to achieve connectedness in fully online courses, faculty must be available, responsive, sensitive to student needs, and create an online environment of connectedness. Additionally, connectedness among students is often more important than between faculty and students. Faculty used social media and communication tools for student encouragement, course support, and sharing her/his personality with students, while students used these tools for peer teaching, mentoring, and community building. Connectedness was thought to benefit students by helping them feel less isolated, more engaged, and achieve greater course success and a sense of relatedness. Faculty reported challenges related to the difficulty of achieving early semester student engagement, cheating, lack of resources/support, and work environment constraints that inhibit achievability of connectedness in fully online courses. This study has implications for designing online courses that incorporate the use of social media and communication tools to foster connectedness between faculty and students and among students. Future research is needed to examine student perceptions of connectedness in fully online courses and possible influences of connectedness on course completion and retention.

Alexander Barton Dissertation Final Defense

The College of Education announces the final Dissertation of

Alexander Barton

for the degree of Doctor of Education

November 8, 2017 at 12:00 pm in Ball Hall 110

Major Advisor: Stephen Zanskas, PhD

Graduate Counseling Students’ Perception of their Preparation to Counsel Children

ABSTRACT: This exploratory study examined masters level counseling students’ perceptions of their preparedness for counseling children. A web-based survey was distributed nationally to students in clinical mental health, rehabilitation, and school counseling programs to explore the students’ desire to counsel children, their perception of their overall ability, and their theoretical preparation. Differences were found among three counseling specialties and the level of student preparation. Significant differences were found between rehabilitation counseling students and clinical mental health students. Significant differences were also found between rehabilitation counseling students and school counseling students. Significant differences were also found between students that had coursework for counseling children and students that did not. Differences were also found between students that had clinical experience counseling children and those that did not have clinical experience counseling children. Implications for counselor educators, student preparation, and future research are discussed.

Keywords: counseling children; clinical mental health; school counseling; rehabilitation; masters level counseling students; perceptions; preparedness