Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/5357
Title: A systemic model for evaluating online course design : a critical realist approach
Authors: Reddy, Pregalathan
Pratt, Deidre 
Keywords: Student engagement;Assessment practices;Learning space design;Online course assessment;Critical realism;Systemic modelling
Issue Date: Mar-2024
Publisher: IATED
Source: Reddy, P. and Pratt, D. 2024. A systemic model for evaluating online course design: a critical realist approach. Presented at: 18th International Technology, Education and Development Conference, Valencia, Spain, 2024. doi:10.21125/inted.2024.1818
Journal: 18th International Technology, Education and Development Conference 
Abstract: 
At the Durban University of Technology (DUT), the fall-out from the recommendation by the Rapid
Response Task Team to transition from the blended mode of teaching to pure online due to the lockdown
caused by COVID-19 in 2020 is now being felt. The realisation is dawning that not all courses are created
equally and, more damning, that some assessment practices are not as good as others. To remedy this
deficit, DUT is currently running an “Assuring the Integrity of Assessment Practices Project”, under the
ambit of the Centre for Quality Promotion and Assurance (CQPA). The focus is on evaluating selected
online courses. As a possible option for evaluation, this paper proposes a systemic model for evaluating
online courses, whether delivered in mixed mode or completely online. The research approach used to
develop the model is critical realist, based mainly on Roy Bhaskar’s philosophy, but also includes Margaret
Archer’s morphogenetic theory, which shows how principles developed in previous temporal epochs are
not always in phase with elements of present-day contexts. This is particularly relevant in the post
pandemic era, where it has been observed that student grades which were skewed upward during the
COVID-19 period are now plateauing in line with the period before COVID-19. While it is obvious that
certain key course elements are now no longer available to both staff and students, a systemic model of
course design is needed which distinguishes between the givens and the variables, so that the most urgent
course deficits are identified and remedied or replaced. It will be argued that the systemic model of course
design discussed in this paper provides insight into the nature of hypermedia communication. It might
assist educators to distinguish between Internet communication and written (i.e., hard print)
communication by showing how the functions thought essential for learning to take place effectively are
carried out in different ways and with different effects in the different media. The model in fact provides a
course design principle outlining ‘felicity conditions’ for effective course delivery. However, while it suggests
the prerequisites for effective course design, the ultimate assessment of effectiveness is left up to the
participants – teacher and students - to decide. As the design principle used is descriptive rather than
value-laden, and can thus be adapted to suit the specific local values operating in any given learning
context, it is well-suited for use in multicultural educational contexts. However, it must be noted that the
model is work-in-progress, and may still be refined further in both research and use.
URI: https://hdl.handle.net/10321/5357
ISSN: 2340-1079 (Online)
DOI: 10.21125/inted.2024.1818
Appears in Collections:Research Publications (Arts and Design)

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