WOMEN’S DIALOG AND DISTANCE LEARNING:A University in the Arab World
Abstract
The purpose of this study was to identify the relationship between the Arab women’s
dialog and their perceptions of distance education, their personal relevance with the
distance education paradigm, and their life affiliations within a distance education
environment.
Aspects of Moore’s Transactional Distance Theory were investigated in this study.
Transactional distance education occurs in an environment when teachers and learners
are separated. This separation deals with learners’ and teachers’ behaviors and affects
both.
This study is a descriptive study employed a mix of methods. A sample of 150 active
female learners at the Al-Quds Open University in Paletsine-Gaza Strip Branch was
surveyed. A response rate of 80% was obtained. Furthermore, eight females from the
responses were telephone interviewed. Descriptive statistics and Pearson correlations
were calculated to identify significant relationships of life affiliations, personal relevance
satisfaction, and perception of distance education dimensions towards female students’
dialog in a distance education setting. The findings indicated that life affiliations had no
significant differences on the women’s dialog measures through distance education.
However, the personal relevance and the perceptions about distance education were
significantly related to the concept of women's dialog.
Keywords
References
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Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
-
Journal Section
-
Authors
Khitam Azaıza
This is me
Publication Date
April 1, 2012
Submission Date
October 14, 2015
Acceptance Date
-
Published in Issue
Year 2012 Volume: 1 Number: 1