Insights: What are the most valuable insights you take with you from this course?
One of the most valuable insights I am taking with me is how central trust is in online learning. I honestly had not thought about trust as a design element before this course. Trust is already difficult to build in everyday social life, even with full physical presence, so doing it online is understandably challenging. But after reading Sutherland, Forsyth, and Felten (2024), I now see that trust shapes how students respond to feedback, how willing they are to ask questions, and how much they dare to take risks. For me, this was a new and important perspective.
Another insight is the importance of balancing cognitive, social, and teaching presence in online learning. I realised that I naturally focus more on cognitive presence—clear structure, content organisation, and planning. But the course helped me see how essential it is to design for social presence, interaction, and connection (Fiock, 2020). It is not enough to provide content; students need to feel a sense of belonging, purpose, and engagement.
Finally, the course helped me understand that online collaboration is not simply dividing tasks. True collaboration requires participation, shared meaning-making, and collective thinking, similar to what Wenger (2010) and Ringer et al. (2022) describe. This deepened my thinking about how learning communities are formed and supported.
The ride: How did you find collaborating in an online PBL group?
Working in the online PBL group was a mixed experience for me. On one hand, I enjoyed the opportunity to think together, share ideas, and see how collaboration can happen online. It reminded me of what I wrote in my Topic 3 reflection that collaboration is not only something we do, but something we are together. When the group is engaged, it can feel meaningful and energising.
On the other hand, I also felt some frustration. A few group members did not participate as seriously or consistently as I had hoped. This made the process uneven at times. My experience with PBL in another course was actually better, so I could not help comparing the two. Still, the moments when we managed to create joint understanding and work together were valuable. They showed me that online collaborative learning works, but it depends heavily on commitment, communication, and shared responsibility.
Takeaway: What would you like to take with you into the future?
Going forward, I want to take with me the idea that intentional design can make online and blended learning meaningful, connected, and human. I want to keep focusing on:
- building trust from the start
- creating activities that students cannot complete in isolation
- designing for interaction and reflection
- offering flexibility where possible
- integrating AI in a thoughtful, pedagogical way
I also want to carry the idea that learning is relational. Whether online or in person, learners thrive when they feel included, respected, and supported. This is something I will continue to prioritise in my teaching.
Questions: What questions do you still have?
I still have questions about how to design assessments that make good use of generative AI while keeping the process meaningful. My personal view is that AI today is similar to Wikipedia 10 or 15 years ago. People were scared of it, but eventually we learned how to use it responsibly. I think the same will happen with AI. The real challenge is figuring out how to design assessments that encourage thinking rather than copying, and how to teach students to use AI as a tool—not as a shortcut.
I am also curious about how to build strong social presence when students have different schedules, backgrounds, and preferences for communication. And I wonder how educational institutions can support teachers more in developing online teaching skills, because this work takes time, reflection, and practice.
