Journal of Information Systems Education (JISE)

Volume 20

Volume 20 Number 2, Pages 175-186

Summer 2009


Does It Really Matter? Using Virtual Office Hours to Enhance Student-Faculty Interaction


Lei Li
Jennifer P. Pitts
Columbus State University
Columbus, GA 31907, USA

Abstract: The use of Web-based learning technologies has increased dramatically over the past decade providing new opportunities and avenues for students to interact with their professors virtually using computer-mediated communication (CMC) technologies. In this article, the authors share their experiences and findings with the use of virtual office hours as a medium for students to communicate with their professors using a Web 2.0 technology, namely Facebook’s instant messaging (IM) client. Participants in the study included both traditional and nontraditional undergraduate students enrolled in on-campus MIS courses at a public U.S. university in the southeast. The findings suggest that students’ use of virtual office hours is not significantly different from their use of traditional office hours; however, participants in classes that offered virtual office hours reported higher levels of satisfaction with office hours than students in classes that offered only traditional face-to-face office hours. Implications for faculty designing courses using virtual office hours as a teaching and learning tool are discussed.

Keywords: Virtual office hours, Computer-mediated communication, Web 2.0, Facebook instant messaging client, Student-faculty interaction

Download this article: JISE - Volume 20 Number 2, Page 175.pdf


Recommended Citation: Li, L. & Pitts, J. P. (2009). Does It Really Matter? Using Virtual Office Hours to Enhance Student-Faculty Interaction. Journal of Information Systems Education, 20(2), 175-186.