Mentoring as complementary support for learner engagement
Student perspectives on onboarding interventions
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.14742/apubs.2023.668Keywords:
online student, intervention, support, mentor, student onboarding, student engagementAbstract
Student engagement is linked to student success and shaped by the availability of student support through their academic journeys. Improving engagement with adequate support strategies is a continuous challenge for open and distance learning (ODL) institutions. However, there is limited understanding of how student engagement experience can be influenced by a support team outside the instructional context of faculty presence. In 2020, the Open Polytechnic (OP) Te P?kenga, a specialist provider of open distance education in New Zealand, implemented a three-tiered framework for student support. This system includes technology-supported mentoring interventions that are aligned to, and separate from, academic faculty support; the mentoring system gives students access to consistent engagement opportunities during their course journeys. The current project examines how students perceived these mentoring interventions, and this paper specifically examines the perceptions of newly enrolled online students on their experiences of the mentoring interventions during onboarding. Students in two introductory level block courses participated in an online, qualitative survey and their responses were thematically analysed following a deductive approach. Key themes in the data were related to the concepts of transactional presence and emotional engagement. These findings demonstrate the value of complementary non-academic support during student onboarding.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2023 Lalitha Jonnavithula, John Y. H. Bai
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.