Learning Technologies Students’ MA Report/Dissertation Database

This database allows you to view the abstracts of dissertations and master reports written by students who have graduated from the Learning Technologies Program at The University of Texas at Austin.

Students’ Trust Building in a Collaborative Learning Team

Author: Chang Hyeseung Maria
Year Published: 2009

Advisor

  • Dr. Paul Resta

Degree

  • Doctoral

Abstract

The purpose of the study was to examine elements which affected students’ team trust building in an online collaborative learning team and relationships among these elements. The setting of this study was a graduate-level online course on Computer Supported Collaborative Learning (CSCL) in which all course activities were conducted collaboratively through online communications. Data were collected from multiple sources including interviews which were audio taped, transcripts of students’ self-reflective journals, transcripts of messages on the asynchronous web conferencing system, transcripts of messages on the synchronous web conferencing system, and the researcher’s reflective journals. Data were analyzed using the coding procedures for developing grounded theory proposed by Strauss and Corbin (1998). Results of the data analysis indicated the influences of CSCL course context including the collaborative nature of the course and the heterogeneity of teams on students’ team trust building. Results also indicated the dynamics of team trust building. Four different components of team trust building, which were initial team trust, factors, dimensions, and consequences of team trust, influenced one another. Students’ initial team trust influenced the factors of team trust which were students’ competence, reliability, communication, and caring. In addition, these factors influenced the dimensions of team trust such as task performance trust and interpersonal trust. Once students built trust in their teams, they could develop collaborative knowledge building and a sense of community which were the consequences of team trust. The consequences of students’ team trust, in turn, influenced the factors of team trust.

Advisors

  • Dr. Joan Hughes
  • Dr. Min Liu
  • Dr. Paul Resta

Degrees

  • Doctoral
  • Masters

Texas Education watermark
Developed for Learning Technologies program by the Office of Instructional Innovation