What's the Difference, Still? A Follow up Methodological Review of the Distance Education Research
Volume 6, Issue 1 (2007), pp. 179–188
Pub. online: 15 April 2007
Type: Article
Published
15 April 2007
15 April 2007
Abstract
A high quality review of the distance learning literature from 1992-1999 concluded that most of the research on distance learning had serious methodological flaws. This paper presents the results of a small-scale replication of that review. A sample of 66 articles was drawn from three leading distance education journals. Those articles were categorized by study type, and the experimental or quasi-experimental articles were analyzed in terms of their research methodologies. The results indicated that the sample of post-1999 articles had the same methodological flaws as the sample of pre-1999 articles: most participants were not randomly selected, extraneous variables and reactive effects were not controlled for, and the validity and reliability of measures were not reported.