Archives For Online Learning

The Marc Parry Chronicle article titled Will Technology Kill the Academic Calendar? is intended to be provocative and gain attention but the sub-title Online, semesters give way to students who set their own schedules really captures the true essence of the article.

Parry is reporting on the Jefferson Community & Technical College program, called Learn Anytime which allows students to register and start classes at any time. Flexible enrollment is not new to distance education so there is significant precedent for this model but what is unique is paying an instructor by the head count.

Learn Anytime professors aren’t compensated per class. They’re compensated per student—$65 a head. By taking advantage of that system and adding other teaching gigs, Mr. Smith earns an annual paycheck that tenured professors might envy: $120,000.

The biggest concern traditional face2face and online educators have with this model is that it lacks the collaborative or social aspect of learning. Another criticism from traditional educators is that this form of instruction does not allow student to get a deep understanding of the content. Both these criticisms assume the traditional class environment is where learning takes place and I am glad to see initiatives like this that are proving this “sacred cow” of academia wrong.

Read the full article…

Students in a large introductory microeconomics course at a major research university were randomly assigned to live lectures versus watching these same lectures in an internet setting, where all other factors (e.g., instruction, supplemental materials) were the same.

Contrary to the claims that are being made in this working paper, lecture capture CANNOT be referred to as online learning. The working paper Is it Live or is it Internet? Experimental Estimates of the Effects of Online Instruction on Student Learning is a better example of what not to do with online learning than it is an example of face2face instruction being superior to online instruction. The paper also assumes that traditional lectures represent good instruction–which is a false assumption. At best the results of this investigation reveal that poor face2face lectures make for even poorer online instruction. This NOT online learning!

Way back in 2002, professor of Educational Psychology as well as Instructional Systems Technology at Indiana University, Curtis Bonk wrote Current Myths and Future Trends in Online Teaching and Learning which included the following list:

  1. Web instruction is an either-or decision.
  2. Pedagogical tools exist to teach online.
  3. College instructors will flock to sophisticated technologies.
  4. College instructors simply need a little more training to teach effectively on the Web
  5. College instructors will not place their work on display for others to critique.
  6. If we ignore this long enough, online learning will go away.
  7. College instructors are loyal.
  8. The institution will own the online course.
  9. College instructors can teach the same way that they teach face-to-face.
  10. Shhh…if you don’t say anything, college instructors will just do this for free.

I would argue that not much has changed since he first published this list and we can now expand online learning to include Mobile Learning. Have look at the full article that includes a full explanation of each myth but Ten More Myths.

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60 Second Recap

Dwayne Harapnuik —  December 2, 2009 — Leave a comment

The 60 Second Recap site offers a video based explanation of major literary works. Can one successfully summarize Orwell’s Animal Farm or Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men in just 60 seconds–perhaps not but these clips provide a starting point or context for the work. This site has only been running since late September and only has 17 books but many more are planned and users and request a recap. In addition users can also provide their video perspective on a book.

Lots of potential for Net Gen users who prefer video to the printed page.

David Nagel of Campus Technology refers to a market research report from Ambient Research that points to the their Chief Research Officers claim:

by 2014, at which time, Adkins forecast, only 5.14 million students will take all of their courses in a physical classroom, while 3.55 million will take all of their classes online, and 18.65 million will take some of their classes online.

While I am not surprised by these claims I and led to ask: What are we doing to prepare for this?