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Building the Personal| Instructors' Perspectives of Rapport in Online and Face-to-Face Classes

<p> This dissertation explores the ways that instructors at a community college perceive instructor-student rapport in online and face-to-face classes. While instructor-student rapport has been shown to play an important role in student retention and success (Benson, Cohen, &amp; Buskist, 2005; Granitz, Koernig, &amp; Harich, 2009; Murphy &amp; Rodriguez-Manzanares, 2012), it has only recently been examined in the context of online education, and generally only from the student&rsquo;s perspective and not from the point of view of faculty. This study utilized grounded theory methods to create a theory of online instructor rapport building to improve best practices in both online and face-to-face classrooms. Interviews with 22 instructors at a large community college indicated that online rapport-building is often more time-consuming and difficult than face-to-face rapport-building, with autonomy, media richness, and uncertainty reduction, all playing a role in establishing rapport between instructors and their students. Using the collected data, I built on Joseph Walther&rsquo;s Social Information Processing Theory (SIPT) by placing it in the context of higher education, and created a Theory of Instructor-Student Rapport Online (TISRO) to explain what makes rapport feel strong, weak, or non-existent, from the perspective of instructors.</p><p>

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:PROQUEST/oai:pqdtoai.proquest.com:10640729
Date01 December 2017
CreatorsAquila, Meredith Suzanne Hahn
PublisherGeorge Mason University
Source SetsProQuest.com
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typethesis

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