Authorship Details
    
  
  
Publication Details
    
  
  
              Resource Type: 
                    Article        
              Publication Title: 
                    Asian Journal of Distance Education        
              Publisher: 
                    The Asian Society of Open and Distance Education        
              Volume: 
                    3        
              Issue or Number: 
                    2        
              Pagination: 
                    48-54        Summary
    
  
  
                    Malaysian  universities  are  not  only  offering  online  distance  learning  programmes  to
thousands  of  learners.  They  are  now  comfortable  enough  to  develop  their  own  learning
management systems. But this does not necessarily spell success. Though learners have become
accustomed and at ease with the new learning technology, they are grappling with problems of
self-regulation and  lack of  self-direction  that warrant a deeper and a more articulate  line of
investigation. This paper presents a  synthesis of  three major  research  studies carried out on
Malaysian  online  distance  learners  at  two  universities  ;  namely  the Universiti  Teknologi
MARA (UiTM) and the Open University of Malaysia (OUM). The points of focus are ; (1) the
learning needs from the learners’ perspectives, (2) the learner-instructor interaction, and (3) the
learning  strategies of online  learners. The outcome provides  an  eye-opening  account of  the
learner  issues  such as  the high dependency on  instructor  support and  the central  role of  the
instructor, the need for just-in-time just-enough learning resources, and the dominance of help-
seeking strategies especially among first-timers or novices. The three studies demonstrate the
need  to  consider dimensions  in  the  form of  learner  experience, perceptions, needs,  and  the
expectations the students bring with them into the realm of the online learning environment. (Authors' abstract)        
         
  

 








