Effect of Personalized Email-Based Reminders on Participants' Timeliness in an Online Education Program: Randomized Controlled Trial.

adult education education email intervention learning online online learning personal reminders program self-regulated learning students timeliness tool

Journal

JMIR formative research
ISSN: 2561-326X
Titre abrégé: JMIR Form Res
Pays: Canada
ID NLM: 101726394

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
13 Oct 2023
Historique:
received: 03 11 2022
accepted: 30 08 2023
revised: 29 08 2023
medline: 13 10 2023
pubmed: 13 10 2023
entrez: 13 10 2023
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Postsecondary students need to be able to handle self-regulated learning and manage schedules set by instructors. This is particularly the case with online courses, as they often come with a limited number of social reminders and less information directly from the teacher compared to courses with physical presence. This may increase procrastination and reduce timeliness of the students. Reminders may be a tool to improve the timeliness of students' study behavior, but previous research shows that the effect of reminders differs between types of reminders, whether the reminder is personalized or general, and depending on the background of the students. In the worst cases, reminders can even increase procrastination. The aim of this study was to test if personalized email reminders, as compared to general email reminders, affect the time to completion of scheduled online coursework. The personalized reminders included information on which page in the online material the participants ought to be on at the present point in time and the last page they were on during their last session. The general reminders only contained the first part of this information: where they ought to be at the present point in time. Weekly email reminders were sent to all participants enrolled in an online program, which included 39 professional learners from three East African countries. All participants in the Online Education for Leaders in Nutrition and Sustainability program, which uses a question-based learning methodology, were randomly assigned to either personalized or general reminders. The structure of the study was AB-BA, so that group A received personalized reminders for the first unit, then general reminders for the rest of the course, while group B started with general reminders and received personalized reminders only in the third (and last) unit in the course. In total, 585 email reminders were distributed, of which 390 were general reminders and 195 were personalized. A Bayesian mixed-effects logistic regression was used to estimate the difference in the probability of being on time with one's studies. The probability of being on time was 14 percentage points (95% credible interval 3%-25%) higher following personalized reminders compared to that following general reminders. For a course with 100 participants, this means 14 more students would be on time. Personalized reminders had a greater positive effect than general reminders for a group of adults working full-time while enrolled in our online educational program. Considering how small the intervention was-adding a few words with the page number the student ought to be on to a reminder-we consider this effect fairly substantial. This intervention could be repeated manually by anyone and in large courses with some basic programming.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Postsecondary students need to be able to handle self-regulated learning and manage schedules set by instructors. This is particularly the case with online courses, as they often come with a limited number of social reminders and less information directly from the teacher compared to courses with physical presence. This may increase procrastination and reduce timeliness of the students. Reminders may be a tool to improve the timeliness of students' study behavior, but previous research shows that the effect of reminders differs between types of reminders, whether the reminder is personalized or general, and depending on the background of the students. In the worst cases, reminders can even increase procrastination.
OBJECTIVE OBJECTIVE
The aim of this study was to test if personalized email reminders, as compared to general email reminders, affect the time to completion of scheduled online coursework. The personalized reminders included information on which page in the online material the participants ought to be on at the present point in time and the last page they were on during their last session. The general reminders only contained the first part of this information: where they ought to be at the present point in time.
METHODS METHODS
Weekly email reminders were sent to all participants enrolled in an online program, which included 39 professional learners from three East African countries. All participants in the Online Education for Leaders in Nutrition and Sustainability program, which uses a question-based learning methodology, were randomly assigned to either personalized or general reminders. The structure of the study was AB-BA, so that group A received personalized reminders for the first unit, then general reminders for the rest of the course, while group B started with general reminders and received personalized reminders only in the third (and last) unit in the course.
RESULTS RESULTS
In total, 585 email reminders were distributed, of which 390 were general reminders and 195 were personalized. A Bayesian mixed-effects logistic regression was used to estimate the difference in the probability of being on time with one's studies. The probability of being on time was 14 percentage points (95% credible interval 3%-25%) higher following personalized reminders compared to that following general reminders. For a course with 100 participants, this means 14 more students would be on time.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Personalized reminders had a greater positive effect than general reminders for a group of adults working full-time while enrolled in our online educational program. Considering how small the intervention was-adding a few words with the page number the student ought to be on to a reminder-we consider this effect fairly substantial. This intervention could be repeated manually by anyone and in large courses with some basic programming.

Identifiants

pubmed: 37831487
pii: v7i1e43977
doi: 10.2196/43977
pmc: PMC10611998
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

e43977

Informations de copyright

©Olle Bälter, Andreas Jemstedt, Feben Javan Abraham, Christine Persson Osowski, Reuben Mugisha, Katarina Bälter. Originally published in JMIR Formative Research (https://formative.jmir.org), 13.10.2023.

Références

Nurse Educ. 2020 Nov/Dec;45(6):E66-E68
pubmed: 32091472
JCO Glob Oncol. 2021 Feb;7:210-222
pubmed: 33555911
Heliyon. 2021 Oct 15;7(10):e08182
pubmed: 34746465
JMIR Form Res. 2022 Dec 5;6(12):e36585
pubmed: 36469416

Auteurs

Olle Bälter (O)

Division of Media Technology and Interaction Design, Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan - Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Andreas Jemstedt (A)

Division of Media Technology and Interaction Design, Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan - Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Feben Javan Abraham (F)

Department of Public Health Sciences, Mälardalen University, Västerås, Sweden.

Christine Persson Osowski (C)

Department of Public Health Sciences, Mälardalen University, Västerås, Sweden.

Reuben Mugisha (R)

Division of Media Technology and Interaction Design, Kungliga Tekniska Högskolan - Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden.

Katarina Bälter (K)

Department of Public Health Sciences, Mälardalen University, Västerås, Sweden.
Department of Medical Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

Classifications MeSH