a set of social and cultural skills necessary to survive
in a new media environment (Jenkins et al., 2006;
Lee, 2022; Marcus, 2019; Liu, 2021).
To enrich the relevant literature and expand
knowledge, this study investigated the impact of
using four small private online courses on the
Chaoxing platform course portal on the new media
literacy (NML) of future rural Chinese language
teachers of excellence.
This was a cross-sectional survey involving 160
participants in the Departments of Literature and
Journalism of Leshan Normal University in
Southwest China. Jenkins’ 12 new media literacy
skills provide a framework the study based on.
Structured questionnaire will be used as instrument
of data collection. For the data analysis, MANOVA
will be used to discover and test effects of duration
of SPOC use on overall NML and its dimensions.
Structured questionnaire will be used as instrument
of data collection. In the other words, the current
study will seek the answers to the following
questions:
·Q1 Does the overall new media literacy of the
future excellent Chinese teachers oriented rural
education differ significantly according to duration
of SPOC use? If does, to what extent?
·Q2 Do the twelve dimensions of new media
literacy of the future excellent Chinese teachers
oriented rural education differ significantly according
to duration of SPOC use? If do, to what extent?
2 CONCEPT DEFINITION AND
THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK
2.1 Concept Definition
2.1.1 What is New Media?
According to Jenkins et al., new media refers to
various socio-cultural platforms based on
information technology.
2.1.2 What is a Course Portal?
A course portal is a new type of course management
website with pedagogical dimensions such as time,
content, and activities. As a new type of educational
media, its content is usually created by the course
instructor, and its website elements consist of basic
functional components such as home page, activities,
materials, announcements, assignments, exams,
discussions, and administration.
2.1.3 What is SPOC Based on Course
Portal?
SPOC means small, private and online courses.
SPOC based on course portal, refers to small, private
online courses created by the instructor of the course
through the Chaoxing course portal. It is a new
concept put forward by Harvard University after
MOOC, and is called “post-MOOC”. Unlike MOOC,
SPOC, based on course portal, has restrictions on the
number of students and conditions for enrollment,
but it is still open and free.
Based on the course portal, the basic information
on the home page of SPOC consists of six areas:
course introduction, faculty team, teaching methods,
reference materials, teaching resources, and course
chapters. the activities of SPOC consist of a library
of activities such as sign-in, voting, selection,
quizzes, topic discussions, accompanying exercises,
questionnaires, grading, and group tasks; the
statistics of SPOC consist of class statistics, resource
statistics, course reports, course SPOC’s materials
consist of course materials, question bank,
assignment bank, test bank, etc. SPOC's notifications
mainly consist of instructor’s notifications; SPOC’s
assignments mainly consist of instructor’s additions
and assignment bank management; SPOC’s
management consists of instructor team
management, assistant instructor management,
course management, class assignment, download
center, operation log, and course review.
2.1.4 What is the Use of SPOC Based on
Course Portal?
In this study, evidence of course portal-based SPOC
usage is presented by data on the number of course
selections, lecture resources, non-video resources,
course materials, course announcements, class
activities, quizzes and assignments, interactive
communication, assessments (tests), and cumulative
page views. To simplify the survey relationship
model, this study used the mean value of the weekly
time spent by course-taking students using the four
SPOCs as the independent variable.
2.2 Theoretical Framework
For the dependent variables, this study used Jenkins’
12 constructs of new media literacy. Jenkins et al
defined the 12 sub-dimensions that constitute New
Media Literacy (NML) as follows (Jenkins et al.,
2006).