The Enhancement of Verbal Immediacy in Online University Classes: A Student-Generated Taxonomy

Authors

  • Richard S. Bello Sam Houston State University
  • Frances E. Brandau Sam Houston State University
  • Dena Horne Sam Houston State University

Keywords:

online immediacy, verbal strategies, affective learning, cognitive learning, online attitudes, online enrollment

Abstract

The goal of this research was to find written strategies online educators can use to create higher levels of immediacy between themselves and their students. Written strategies are simple and do not require anything other than e-mail or a feedback textbox. Students (N = 194) completed open-ended surveys asking them to list examples of written communication used by online instructors that created a sense of closeness. A subset of the data was independently coded by the authors to induce a set of 13 categories, some of which were unique to this study, in not being discovered in previous research. All of the surveys were coded using the agreed on categories. Statistical analysis suggested strategies students favored the most: encouragement, personalized feedback, and instructor availability. Other analyses also showed that such immediacy variables were associated with factors such as attitude toward online classes and tendency to enroll in them.

Author Biographies

Richard S. Bello, Sam Houston State University

Professor of Communication Studies at Sam Houston State University; can be reached at 936-294-1516.

Frances E. Brandau, Sam Houston State University

Professor of Communication Studies at Sam Houston State University; can be reached at 936-294-0448.

Dena Horne, Sam Houston State University

Lecturer of Communication Studies at Sam Houston State University

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Published

2020-03-08

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Section

Articles