#SCAFFOLD RESOURCE PROFESSIONAL#
Sharing of professional experiences and visual resources, a more informal tone of communication, and the use of students’ and lecturers’ names in online postings were evident throughout the course. In particular, students felt that formative and timely feedback was paramount to their online scaffolding and expected lecturers to offer procedural, social, and strategic scaffolding.
![scaffold resource scaffold resource](https://blog.designsafe.co.uk/hs-fs/hubfs/What%20Are%20Scaffold%20Design%20Calculations%20%26%20Why%20Are%20They%20So%20Important.jpg)
Furthermore, procedural and strategic scaffolding were reported by students as essential forms of learner support. Students thought of online scaffolding as a coaching process in which lecturers monitor learners’ online engagement to provide encouragement, identify misconceptions, and provide direction and feedback when necessary. At the beginning of the course, lecturers provided a high level of procedural and social scaffolding followed by an on-going learner support (strategic scaffolding), which peaked before assignment deadlines. Research outcomes revealed that lecturers’ understanding of online scaffolding focused on the design and use of resources, modelling, and the use of questioning in forum discussions in order to facilitate learner engagement with content. A third online space, the Question & Answer section, was archived and analysed in order to enrich insights that were emerging from the other data sources. The theory of transactional distance provided a theoretical framework and the literature on scaffolding in distance education guided the analysis process. Two interviews with lecturers, two student online surveys and two online forum discussion logs, each one from the start and the end of the course, were analysed using content and statistical analyses.
![scaffold resource scaffold resource](https://pbs.twimg.com/media/C4on9huXUAASWYn.jpg)
Through a mixed-method research design, a case study was developed weaving the perspectives and actions of lecturers and students in a fully online post-graduate educational leadership course. In order to address this research gap, this study explored the intricacies of online scaffolding in a fully online educational leadership course. Although online scaffolding is crucial for student learning, not much is known about scaffolding in an online post-graduate course.
![scaffold resource scaffold resource](https://irp-cdn.multiscreensite.com/3cd515e5/dms3rep/multi/IMG_2945.jpg)
A qualitative analysis of eighteen college students using different types of scaffolding (instructional supports) while working on a World Wide Web (Three major findings related to use of the Online scaffolding encompasses a range of effective teaching strategies that help students to achieve their learning goals while at the same time exercising their autonomy.