From Presences to Linked Influences Within Communities of Inquiry

Authors

  • Susi Peacock Queen Margaret University
  • John Cowan Professor emeritus, Herriot Watt University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.19173/irrodl.v17i5.2602

Keywords:

Community of inquiry, presences, influences, cognitive maps, tutoring, deep learning

Abstract

Much research has identified and confirmed the core elements of the well-known Community of Inquiry Framework (CoIF): Social, Cognitive and Teaching Presence (Garrison, 2011). The overlap of these Presences, their definitions and roles, and their subsequent impact on the educational experience, has received less attention. This article is prompted by the acceptance of that omission (Garrison, Anderson, & Archer, 2010). It proposes enrichment to the Framework, by entitling the overlapping spaces uniting pairs of Presences as “Influences.”  These three spaces, linking pairings of Social, Teaching, and Cognitive Presences, can be labelled as “trusting,” “meaning-making,” and “deepening understanding.” Their contribution to the educational experience is to address constructively some of the challenges of online learning, including learner isolation, limited learner experience of collaborative group work and underdeveloped higher-level abilities. For these purposes we also envisage “cognitive maps” as supporting learners to assess progress to date and identify pathways forward (Garrison & Akyol, 2013). Such maps, developed by a course team, describe the territory that learners may wish to explore, signpost possible activities, and encourage the development of cognitive and interpersonal abilities required for online learning.    We hope that considering the Influences may also assist tutor conceptualisations of online community-based learning. Our proposals call on both learners and tutors to conceive of the Presences and Influences as working together, in unison, to enhance the educational experience whilst fostering deep learning. Our suggestions are presented to stimulate scholarly debate about the potential of these interwoven sections, constructively extending the Framework.

Author Biographies

Susi Peacock, Queen Margaret University

Susi Peacock is a senior lecturer, responsible for technology enhanced learning, at Queen Margaret University (QMU), Edinburgh, where she has worked since 1999.  She provides numerous staff development activities, working at the school, subject and individual practitioner level and offers a masters module in network technologies in the learning environment.  She has recently completed her PhD into the Community of Inquiry Framework.

John Cowan, Professor emeritus, Herriot Watt University

John Cowan is a retired university teacher for whom the development of higher level cognitive, affective and interpersonal abilities has long been a priority. In the past 30 years he has harnessed the potential for achieving development through reflective journalling with students of civil engineering, social sciences, general studies and education.

Published

2016-09-26

How to Cite

Peacock, S., & Cowan, J. (2016). From Presences to Linked Influences Within Communities of Inquiry. The International Review of Research in Open and Distributed Learning, 17(5). https://doi.org/10.19173/irrodl.v17i5.2602

Issue

Section

Research Articles