Teaching Excellence Workshop:
Social Presence in the Online Course
Beverly Baliko, Assistant Professor, College of Nursing
Vera Polyakova-Norwood, Director of Online Learning, College of Nursing
February 22, 2011
Description
Why do some students and instructors enjoy online courses and feel connected to each other while others struggle to make sense of them? Research suggests that our satisfaction with online teaching and learning depends upon our “social presence,” i.e. a degree to which we can project our personalities and be perceived as real people in digital environments. But how important is it in the learning process and does it affect student academic performance? This presentation will examine the role of social presence in promoting class participation, collaborative learning, academic achievement, and satisfaction with learning. Presenters will share social presence strategies from graduate and undergraduate online courses and share data from midterm and end-of-course learning effectiveness surveys. The session will conclude with suggestions for increasing student and instructor social presence in online courses with small and large enrollments.
View This Workshop
Viewing requires Windows Media Player 9 or 10. Download it free here.
- View On-line.
- Save to View Off-line.
Recommended for viewers with a slow Internet connection. To save this video to a hard drive, right-click the save link and choose "Save Target As..."
About the Facilitators
![]() |
Beverly Baliko has taught undergraduate and graduate nursing courses since 2001. She has a strong interest in online teaching/learning formats and has been an enthusiastic faculty collaborator in the promotion of innovative classroom strategies for adult learners, both in transitioning existing courses, to online delivery, and in new course development. Dr. Baliko has presented research findings at several regional, national, and international venues. |
Vera Polyakova-Norwood is the Director of Online Learning in the College of Nursing, where she assists faculty with design, development, implementation and evaluation of online courses, modules and activities. She has led numerous workshops on technology-based teaching and learning for USC faculty and graduate students. |
![]() |

