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Hybrid Education 2.0

December 28, 2009

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What if you could teach a college course without a classroom or a professor, and lose nothing?

According to researchers at Carnegie Mellon University, there’s no "what if" about it. Earlier in the decade, Carnegie Mellon set out to design software for independent learners taking courses through the university’s Open Learning Initiative, an effort to make courses freely available to non-enrolled learners. But rather than merely making course materials available to non-students, like MIT's famous OpenCourseware project, Carnegie Mellon wanted to design courses that would respond to the individual needs of each student. It currently has courses in 12 different subjects available on its Web site, mostly in math and science.

In the process of testing the software on Carnegie Mellon students to make sure it would “do no harm” if used, the researchers found that, over a two-semester trial period, students in a traditional classroom introductory statistics course scored no better than similar students who used the open-learning program and skipped the three weekly lectures and lab period.

Carnegie Mellon is not about to replace all its professors with computer programs. But with $4 million in private grants and perhaps more to come from the federal government, the university is currently exploring how the open-learning software could be used in conjunction with classroom education to speed up the teaching and learning process -- a prospect that some involved think could help solve overcrowding in America's community colleges and realize the Obama administration's goal of boosting graduation rates.

As intriguing it was to find that a computer program could prepare students to pass tests just as well as a professor, the researchers seem more excited by a hybrid application of the open-learning program that, instead of replacing professors, tries to use them more effectively. By combining the open-learning software with two weekly 50-minute class sessions in an intro-level statistics course, they found that they could get students to learn the same amount of material in half the time.

“If they’re all getting that baseline information, [faculty] can spend that class time going deeper and doing something much more interesting, so they can really leverage that you’re an expert,” says Candace Thille, director of the Open Learning Initiative, “because right now, oftentimes the faculty expertise is wasted.”

The project’s 2008 report on the tests takes care to state that the goal of the testing was not to prove that professors are superfluous to introductory-level courses, but rather to make sure students who don’t have access to a classroom course can take an “equivalently effective alternative.” That those courses might produce indistinguishable outcomes from professor-taught classes attended by tuition-paying students is nonetheless provocative.

“At the most selective tier of colleges and universities, they have some significant interest in the existing model of residential education,” says Roger C. Schonfeld, manager of research at Ithaka S+R, the strategy arm of Ithaka, a non-profit higher-ed technology group. “And I think there’s a lot more at risk in terms of the reputation they have built up over the course of decades or centuries, that even for the many advantages that might come from new models, there may be obvious or unforeseen disadvantages they need to guard against.”

Gary Rhoades, general secretary of the American Association of University Professors, says that the intangible benefits of “contact with human beings" are still crucial to learning, and that plenty of research has said so. “So many of the effects that we seek from education… go well beyond the limited ‘learning outcomes’ that are defined for a specific subject matter in a specific class,” Rhoades says. “Those outcomes generally are connected to a narrow set of competencies focused on the specific subject matter.”

Still, the apparent quality of Carnegie Mellon’s online learning program does touch on the prickly subject of what should qualify students to receive credit for material they demonstrate having learned. “If we can demonstrate that these courses are effective at supporting these students to achieve these outcomes even without being in a formal class, why isn’t someone saying OK, work through the [online] course, and if you work through it successfully we’ll say, ‘Great, you’ve passed statistics, here’s credit!’ ” says Thille. “And that’s actually a really big question in the open educational resources movement right now.”

Thille says the current model relies on a credentialed instructor to confirm what written assessments suggest: that a student has either earned institutional credit or not. And while she does not dismiss this model, and makes clear that her institution has no plans to “do away with” professors, she does note that a logic course, currently taught to residential students for credit through the hybrid model, only involves a cursory level of instructor contact. “It’s completely taught self-paced and online, and they put a [teaching assistant] who is, in theory, responsible for being in the course,” Thille says. “Basically what they do is just monitor the grade books… The students are pretty much working through it on their own, and at some point they’re done, and then they get credit for taking logic.”

The university also plans to move a non-credit digital literacy course from its current incarnation as a class taught in clusters by teaching assistants to one taught completely online by the software’s digital tutors.

But what the Carnegie Mellon researchers are selling -- and what the U.S. government might be looking to buy -- is greater efficiency, which is the promise of the hybrid version. The university last week announced it has received $4 million from the Hewlett, Gates, and Lumina foundations to help build a version of the Open Learning Initiative specifically for community colleges, citing the White House’s proposed “American Graduation Initiative,” an effort currently under review in Congress that would invest up to $500 million in online learning projects, possibly based on the Carnegie Mellon model.

‘Reinventing Higher Education’

So what exactly is the pedagogical model Carnegie Mellon has discovered, that has inspired such faith? Essentially, it’s an online program that teaches students itself, rather than just being the medium a professor uses to teach. Furthermore, it leverages the opportunity to interact directly with a unique student -- an opportunity a professor addressing dozens of students in a lecture hall does not have.

“Studies have shown that immediate and targeted feedback leads to significant reductions in the time it takes students to achieve a desired level of performance,” the researchers wrote in a paper on the project published last year. “Distributed throughout OLI-Statistics, there are many ‘mini-tutors,’ interactive activities that give students hints and feedback as they practice individual skills,” they continue. “Each of these was carefully constructed to respond to particular mistakes and misconceptions students would likely show.”

In other words, the software acts like a private tutor, quizzing students constantly as they work through linear lessons and adjusting in accordance with how quickly they show they are grasping different concepts. Testing companies have used a similar concept to make standardized evaluations such as the GRE and the GMAT adapt to the abilities demonstrated by the test-taker, but using adaptive technology as a teaching tool is relatively novel.

The virtual tutor takes care of the basic concepts that typically dominate lectures, leaving professors open to plan the face-to-face component of the course according to what parts of the curriculum the software tells him students are picking up more slowly, and what concepts could bear reinforcement. For example, if a statistics professor notices in the data he receives from activity in the open-learning program that a great number of students struggled with the assessments the program gave while teaching conditional probability, the professor could use the class periods to hold a discussion with his students about that concept until he is confident they get it -- a preferable alternative, Thille says, to rolling through concepts didactically and hoping they stick.

“I would call that reinventing higher education,” says Thille, noting her hope that this new paradigm of course design could render lecture courses -- and lecture halls -- obsolete. “It sounds Pinky and the Brain-like, but that’s actually what I’m trying to do.”

Lectures and the classroom spaces built to accommodate them, she explains, represent academe’s first attempt to do higher education at scale after new waves of students started flooding into America’s universities following World War II. With technology having evolved to its current state, such a method is primitive, she says. “You have this poor faculty member,” Thille says, “who’s sitting there as an expert in their area trying to figure out how to transfer their expertise to this large number of students, who are all variable. And it’s a horrible task. The affordances of the technology and also the learning sciences… for the first time enable us to really think about how to scale in a much more effective way, so we truly can serve many many many more students."

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Comments on Hybrid Education 2.0

  • Excellent, C+
  • Posted by Sam Nadler , Math. at University of TOledo on December 28, 2009 at 7:15am EST
  • This is wonderful news. Now maybe professors will be forced to adjust their thinking about how they deliver their courses. CONTENT is not what education is about; it is only the method and background by which education is taught (in analogy, grammer is not what writing is about -- it is the necessary prerquisite for good writing and stimulates good writing). Education is about learning how to think and analize, and the method is constant exposure to professors and students in classes and out of classes. One would think that with the internet, etc., content would be used merely as a tool to foster intelligent discussion; instead, content has become the beginning and end of courses. But if the profession is threatened with extinction, then it may adapt -- or is Darwin wrong?

  • I Don't Lecture
  • Posted by CC Prof on December 28, 2009 at 10:30am EST
  • At the end of the piece, we have this quote: “You have this poor faculty member,” Thille says, “who’s sitting there as an expert in their area trying to figure out how to transfer their expertise to this large number of students, who are all variable. And it’s a horrible task. The affordances of the technology and also the learning sciences… for the first time enable us to really think about how to scale in a much more effective way, so we truly can serve many many many more students."

    Why is the contrast between in-class instruction and computer assisted instruction frequently presented as a false dichotomy between out-dated, boring lectures and new, gee-whiz computer programming? I don't lecture. I teach philosophy and logic with a very interactive approach. I teach sections of 25 or fewer students. My students get a great deal of personal attention inside and outside of the classroom. It is not a horrible task. It is exciting and fun. I like to teach. I like my students. I like the subject matter that I teach. I teach passionately, and my students learn. I couldn't think of a better job, although I could think of better paying jobs. I'll allow myself to be replaced with a computer program as soon as we have one that can answer student questions about free will or about what Plato is saying in his dialogues. And I think that such computers are possible in some real sense, but we aren't even close right now.

    However, I did like the fact that the article mentioned the focus on hybrid classes. That seems to offer the best of both worlds. I make use of a variety of computer programs to teach some aspects of logic and critical thinking. It helps some students. Others can't seem to navigate the programs.

    Replicating the success of such a project at the community college level will be quite challenging. Carnegie Mellon students are better prepared for college in general and certainly better prepared to work on their own. Attrition rates are very high in serious online courses at community colleges. In my view, many community college students would benefit enormously from more interaction with faculty, not less.

  • unlikely misconceptions?
  • Posted by Henry , Prof. Emer. on December 28, 2009 at 10:45am EST
  • The "virtual tutor" is intriguing. But how will it handle the unlikely "mistakes and misconceptions" of the students? I can see how the hybrid course, combining computer-based and face to face instruction can do that.

    Hmm, I guess I'm focusing on one aspect of what CC Prof was discussion.

  • Posted by Perry on December 28, 2009 at 11:00am EST
  • I teach statistics so I tried out the online stats course linked in this article. It had no homework. It was largely a lecture in print form, with pictures no different and no better than those I use myself in class. No animation.

    I find it difficult to believe that students are going to learn more effectively with this approach. Perhaps the reason it seems that way is that Carnegie-Mellon students are being tested? They already have computation skills and could move through the basics of stats with minimal guidance (assuming they've been admitted to computer science or engineering programs at the university). I cannot see my under-prepared state university students succeeding this way.

    In contrast, I have been using the web-based tutorial at Aleks.com. It is a very different approach and works very well -- and is actually being used at many local community colleges, but it includes the interactive homework and feedback touted but non-existent in the Carnegie-Mellon version.

    So, I do not understand how the claims were achieved with the software presented in this article. If the point is that very smart and motivated students can learn independently, I think that is probably true. But are such students the only ones we are aiming to educate?

  • Hybrid
  • Posted by Sally Wright , Instructor at City College of Chicago on December 28, 2009 at 11:30am EST
  • You just knew this was bound to happen and it's been occuring at some schools any how. At one of our community colleges they tried (continuing education courses) strictly online learn as you go, but abandoned it. The course cost the same as in-class courses. I don't think that most students liked it because of the lack of human contact. These type of "hybrid" courses would appeal to students who have superior learning and studying capabilities. But having a human being motivate and spur you to complete the course cannot be done with online hybrids.

  • CCProf: Why?
  • Posted by DFS on December 28, 2009 at 12:00pm EST
  • Because 'new' is all they've got now. By definition, 'new' is undefined, and therefore we must blindly, 'instinctually,' follow the new and reject the old. Else, 'progress' will not take place, again by "definition."

  • Cujus regio, ejus religio
  • Posted by Bob on December 28, 2009 at 12:00pm EST
  • Reading your piece would make Socrates reach for the hemlock once again; Plato would weep at the reduction of dianoia to techne; Kant would be confirmed in his belief that the thing-in-itself does not matter; Nietzsche would joyfully anounce the total replacement of the real with the apparent, the final arrival of the midday when the bright light of nothingness reigns supreme; Technology finally rules the mind in ways that nothing could in the entire human history; its rituals and myths form the new opium of the masses. We are forever locked up in Plato's cave. By the way, what is education?

  • every since Skinner's
  • Posted by edges worn prof on December 28, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • Technology of Instruction in 1957, I have been hearing these same lines from the on-line crowd like a broken record with each we (old) thing in teaching technology. The fellow who tried the software is spot-on and that was my experience also. He was also spot-on with the comment that the key variable in all of the arguement is what is tested and this has been the problem since Skinner original self-written programs and tests. The test are all lower order behaviors in Bloom's new revised taxonomy and not upper level cognition, thinking and problem solving and the apporach also pretty much rules out modelling (Bandura) and what one learns observing a skilled expert analyze and solve a problem and all the various connection she makes between the concepts and even content from other disciplines. And then there is this whole concept of the isolated learner (I often wonder what would have happened if Skinner had put 2 mice in those mazes) and the whole realm of cooperative learning in a classroom as preparation for working in the modern marketplace (a big theme in community colleges). I happen to be a champion of self-directed learning but understand that these skills have to be built and the approach is only effective for a subset of students. Other students need other more social and directive processes. And it is the same with on-line instruction, there is a sizable sub-group for whom it does not work well at all which emerges whenever individual difference variables are included in the study done rather than looking at the (behaviorist) aggregated mean. A sense of history and the long trail of gaps between rhetoric and reality is need by the Carnegie group and an awareness that eductaion (versus training) is about more than lower order cognitive outcomes. Personally, I hate to see the 60's all over again more or less but this is more or less what has been occurring the last few years in my view. There is a contribution all of this technology can make but it won't make until it gets by all of the hyperoble and rhetoric which goes back to Skinner. A much better model and far more sophisticated and reasonable view of teachnology and learning can be seen in George Pressey's work in the 1930's which was ignored by Skinner as it was cognitively based and thus anethma.

  • on-line learning should be unique
  • Posted by Lynda , adjunct faculty- English/Speech at Hcc & CCBC on December 28, 2009 at 1:00pm EST
  • I didn't follow the link, but based on Perry's description, it doesn't seem to me that Carnegie Mellon will earn its $4 million grant. Having just recently completed my Master's in Distance Education, I learned definitively that on-line, self-paced education is not just looking at a posted video of a lecture and answering questions. On-lline learning works best when it involves deep learning, achieved through discussion and interaction.

    Having taught 15 years at the Community College level, I am also tired of people counting CC as simply a fall back position and trying to "grade" our effectiveness by how many students graduate. Oddly, people actually come to CC to learn things. I had a student who took Developmental English nine times. He needed to learn, so he kept trying until he did. You can't measure that kind of tenacity by regular standards. I have kids who come to me who can not identify a noun, yet alone figure out how to write cohesive sentences and paragraphs; yet, somehow, in 14 weeks of intense work, they move forward. And, in our reading and analysis, they learn other things besides English and Speech. I've had more than one student say things like, "I learned more about history in your class than I ever did in history class." Or, "I never thought of other people's perspectives."

    Education is not just learning things. It's learning how to learn; how to think; how to see the world through a wider lense. You can not gain those things through, essentially, filling out forms. And, as much as I love the concept of on-line learning and enjoy how it has the potential to reach people who could not otherwise be reached, it is only a tool. And, if Perry's view is a true one, CMellon is not using the tool very well.

  • Applications to College Football?
  • Posted by In the Name of Efficiency on December 28, 2009 at 2:00pm EST
  • I am a professor who also coaches a college sports team. While I think we need to find ways to deliver high quality education at costs that are affordable, I'm not persuaded that comparisons of traditional courses with on-line courses capture the intangible benefits provided by a human professor. What about the following:
    * A professor of an introductory class who is so good in the classroom that he/she inspires legions of students to adopt that subject as their major -- or to take additional courses in it -- because the students learn to love the subject?
    * A professor who helps a student to unlock a potential the student didn't know he/she had -- and thus changes the student's life. (Perhaps more likely to happen in small classes.)
    * A professor who transforms a student's life through in-class experiences and/or mentoring experiences that eventually result in major gifts from the alumnus to the university.

    If we are really after efficiencies and machines are near perfect substitutes for people, then I am looking forward to the day that DI-A universities can save millions of dollars/year by replacing some of their football coaches (especially the ones who coach the freshmen) with computers.

  • Intelligent Division of Labor
  • Posted by Eric Gates , Sr. Sales Consultant at ALEKS Corporation on December 28, 2009 at 2:15pm EST
  • Greetings,

    I think everyone except a few highly biased humans would agree: IFF a machine can educate large numbers of students in subject X better, faster, and cheaper than a human being, it is only a matter of time before some clevr school does just that, and starts winning the wars.

    However, even I (a Sales Consultant for ALEKS, a company on the verge of testing these kinds of questions), do not believe it will be possible or desirable anytime soon. So I hope the few, highly-biased humans about whom I wrote in paragraph one can exhale and relax for a minute, while we consider the key questions:

    1) Are there ***some*** things machines can do much better than humans? (Hint: YES! - try racing one in simple addition, for example)

    2) Are there ***some*** things humans can do much better than machines? (God, I hope so). A tearful, 18-year-old first-year math or general chemistry student who's just failed an exam because his high school didn't really prepare him for University work needs someone to smile, look him in the eye, and confidently say "You can do this! Let's take a look at what happened...)

    So what's needed now isn't an outright replacement of humans with machines--God forbid!.

    What's needed is an intelligent division of labor, with machines carrying out certain tasks at which they excel, FREEING humans to spend more time on tasks at which they excel.

    I am often asked whether I think computers will replace humans in higher education, especially for the lower-level courses currently held in enormous lecture halls.

    My answer? No. But humans who use computers well will likely replace humans who do not.

  • Posted by marie on December 28, 2009 at 4:30pm EST
  • Several questions and issues come to mind when I read such articles:
    1. What is the attrition rate of such on-line courses?
    2. Who owns the course material which was developed with the expertise of college professors? At least I hope so!
    3. On-line courses are notoriously labor-intensive? What compensation and/or support do the instructors teaching these on-line courses get?
    4. Have the students taking these on-line courses been polled as to whether they like such courses better than those taught face-to-face?
    5. What is the difference between training and educating?
    As someone who has taught on-line courses, I know first hand what the pitfalls are. And my on-line students constantly told me that they would take any face-to-face course before an on-line one if they had the chance. Often they did not. And they would take my face-to-face course before anyone else's.

  • Why not Technology Throughout
  • Posted by Prof Ed on December 28, 2009 at 4:30pm EST
  • Is it possible to try similar cyber replacements of deans, provosts and presidents by special online specialist firms or local financial affairs duties with centralized national accounting firms? At places where administrative growth outstrips instructional positions, does so with salaries that exceed those paid to state governors, and lack transparency, that seems the ripest place for boards to pilot investigations that would be destined to produce greatest savings.

  • free the professors to do what?
  • Posted by adjunct professor on December 28, 2009 at 4:30pm EST
  • I have been in higher education for most of my professional life, but I have friends in the corporate world, and they have taught me how the real world works. A fundamental principle in a business enterprise is to work to establish a direct line from the producer/service provider to the consumer, eliminating as far as possible the middleman. In the corporatized university, professors ARE the middleman. More professors need to wake up and learn "how the university works" and then figure out how to organize and take collective action to protect themselves against the institutional and structural changes that pose a very real threat to the professoriate itself. If they don't, they're going to look up from their desks one day to discover that they're now free...to find another job.

  • Noteworthy Study: Testing for QC of Online courses
  • Posted by Glen S. McGhee at FHEAP on December 28, 2009 at 9:30pm EST
  • I agree with Perry about testing being the distinguishing feature here.
    But it goes without saying that every online course should be be standardized the same way -- how else would we know if students aren't being short-changed when they enroll in courses using experimental delivery methods?
    The sad thing is, they aren't. Testing like this isn't being used for online quality control. Sadly, that's what makes this study noteworthy.

  • This is the WORST prospect ever for higher education
  • Posted by Paul DiCocco , Prospective Pre-Doctoral Student at University of Southern California, Dept. of Pharmacy on December 29, 2009 at 5:00am EST
  • First off, let me just say that advanced technology is certainly going to be my number one enemy as I look for careers in academia following my Ph.D. I strongly believe that technology itself will ultimately bring the death of humanity. As technology gets more advanced, it is limiting your everyday, interpersonal human and social communication.

    This is certainly the WRONG direction to take, I'm sorry. I realize that universities do require prospective academic employees to be open to "technology in the classroom," but there is a limit to how much technology one can introduce . . . it must be our goal to achieve an effective BALANCE between technology and humanity.

    The very first sentence of this article hit a nerve: "What if you could teach a college course without a classroom or a professor, and lose nothing?" What kind of ridiculous question is that? OF COURSE YOU WOULD LOSE SOMETHING! The traditional classroom setting would be completely extricated, and professors (as we see them today and always have been seeing them) will be unemployed. Is this just a money issue? It's disgusting and pathetic how everything is boiling down to MONEY. When are these people going to WAKE UP???

    As far as I'm concerned, NOTHING could compare to a dynamically charismatic professor who truly cares for his students' performance and delivers the material in a clear-cut and engaging way, thereby actually encouraging students to grasp the material fully. This is how I would be as a college professor, and not even technology could stand a chance. Wouldn't it be extremely boring if all you did was study information off a computer program??? Please. If anything, I would introduce a portion of technology to assist me and my students absorb the information more readily, but NOT to let it serve as an end in itself.

    This is my philosophy, and I will stand by it through thick and thin. If the topic of technology in the classroom is brought up at job interviews, I absolutely will not hesitate to state my philosophy on the issue (given above). If anybody would like to comment on my post, please feel free to e-mail me at PD18750@aol.com. I will not be checking the responses on here. We need to put a stop to this immediately before technology gets way too out of hand.

    ~Paul DiCocco

  • "scored no better than..."
  • Posted by Brad , Math adjunct at Howard Community College on December 29, 2009 at 3:00pm EST
  • Doesn't this depend on what is being tested?

  • Yes and No
  • Posted by cts on December 29, 2009 at 4:00pm EST
  • Some kind of on-line training might be very helpful: 1) where the students are, already, self-motivated, 2) where the content is lower-order thinking or logical/quantitative, and 3) where the materials are such as to engage student interest.

    But how can these programs that offer, in effect, on-line textbooks be expected to be more useful for the average college student? The average student, today, does not read the texts assigned, often has difficulty following instructions, and is not a self-directed learner. An increasing number of them have special disorders that require individualized management and interaction.

    And how can such programs achieve the kind of learning we aim for in many fields: deeper thinking, making of connections, ability to apply knowledge beyond the obvious cases? I cannot even understand how sitting alone - or communicating on-line - is going to help young people gain experience working with other people - others who are often unlike them, who may have difficult personalities, or who will expect the new graduates to be able to sit down with a group and arrive at compromises.

    I use some technology in my courses; it can be very useful. Technology will not substitute for time spent with students, for personal encouragement, or for face-to-face work with other students. Tools are tools; they are designed to be used by intelligent craftspeople, not to replace them.

     

     

  • Posted by Professor Zero on December 29, 2009 at 7:15pm EST
  • A very important issue is what the content, methodology, and so on of the online materials are. I've had to deal with some pretty deficient ones lately.

  • Posted by Carnegie Mellon Alumnus on December 29, 2009 at 11:15pm EST
  • I am an alumnus of CMU. Perhaps a computer could have taught me some subject matter as well as my professors did. But, while at CMU I did encounter several professors who profoundly changed my life. They took an interest in my progress, encouraged me when I thought I was failing, challenged me to do more than I thought I could, and continued to take time to promote my career success -- even after I graduated. It's hard to imagine how a computer could be so transformative in the life of a student.

  • It Ain't John Henry Vs. The Machine
  • Posted by Ben Reynolds , Sr. Program Manager, CTYOnline at Johns Hopkins on December 30, 2009 at 8:30am EST
  • It's about using human beings, as the article notes, to do what humans do best. Lecturing from a podium was a medieval techno breakthrough -- imparting info to the largest number of people in the most efficient manner. The GI Bill merely stretched that technology to its limit, the largest possible lecture hall. This is not the best use of a human being.

    As an example, we offer a course called "Crafting the Essay." http://ctyjhu.org/cdw3 The lessons are a series of exercises that impart the wisdom of many writing teachers distilled by me and several other compositionists. The lessons ARE the lectures students would get in a f2f comp course.

    By providing lessons, we free the humans in our fully online course to spend their time answering queries and writing critiques of the students' work. Our instructors spend between 60 and 90 minutes on each student for each lesson, mostly via text (email, classroom messaging, or commenting in the student's document). Critiques are a minimum of 400 words. Each student gets the INDIVIDUAL attention that a f2f lecture format classroom just can't provide. Each student learns writing via writing.

    In essence, this is an "expert system," in which the lessons anticipate the most common pitfalls of composition in order to allow the experts to confer with students on uncommon pitfalls. But, also to recognize, as machines cannot yet do, the strengths of the work.

    Students are not deprived of human contact. Rather, they are given the best form of human contact: problem posing directly related to their own work. The experts' passion for the subject comes through loud and clear. Often, it is that passion that keeps a student whose strongest interest is math or science in the course.

    Our drop out rate is less than 5%.

  • And The Winner Is …
  • Posted by Frizbane Manley on December 30, 2009 at 11:30am EST
  • Thank god 2009 has not passed us by and I can still nominate this News article for the category of “Most-Words-Used-To-Say-Nothing.” I think the information to words ratio for this article must rival IHE’s all-time low for 2009.

    Next time perhaps we’ll learn a bit about (1) what this new on-line “strategy” and implementation are all about and (2) why it’s only as effective as a class taught by a randomly selected (I presume) Carnegie Mellon professor (and what a low-level base-line for success that must be). Indeed, can you even imagine these guys starting their project …

    Education Specialist A: “Okay Bob, I’ve got this idea. We’ll create an on-line Statistics for Business course that not only covers the requisite material, but also enables students to “test out” as well as students “test out” in your Statistics for Business course.”

    Education Specialist B: “Great idea Alice. Any on-line instructional program that can match my well-documented expertise in the classroom will turn the educational world upside down … and probably make us a bundle of money in the process. And, by the way, why don’t we start with the on-line materials my friend Charlene has been using to enhance her classroom instruction for the past fifteen years.”

  • Instructor Presence in Online "drones"?
  • Posted by Jenny , Instructor, Accelerated Teacher Certification Program at Houston Community College on January 4, 2010 at 5:15am EST
  • To me, the graphic is provides a clearer picture of the input a professor has in the program than the written portion of the article. If you study the graphic, you will see that four critical elements of f2f teaching are addressed in the online course design. a) The whole program is designed by an expert in the field, (instructor) presumably one who is well trained in online pedagogy as well as the specific content matter, and uses reliable student data (previous knowledge, online experience, college readiness, course readiness etc.) as a driving force in course goal setting and overall need for course in the program

    b) The course design is a function of that analysis which includes an institution's available resources, course time frame and purpose for providing course with regard to essential knowledge in a program or board certification. This is an integrated analysis and is not superfluous when evaluating student learning feedback

    c) The science of learning draws upon the growing acceptance that computer assisted learning, using learner controlled interactive media and RLO's provides a lens for the instructor to view student learning in a clearer, more authentic way while it optimizes the student learning by 24/7 availability, repetition, links to supportive materials and instant feedback on progress. Use of metacognition, a higher-order thinking skill, is embedded in quality online course material in the form of a discussion board and well maintained feedback loop with course cohorts and instructor

    d) Student performance is both serves as the entry way and final analysis of the course. It is where assessment for developing a course begins and where the course itself is evaluated against the content and pedagogy used.

    Much of the fear of online learning discussed here is that the presence of a live being, a caring mentor, and expert who can offer wise counsel and a meaningful relationship to the discipline and fuel a passion for ones work, will be displaced by a metric of success measured by quantities ever-more content and data accumulation. Nothing can be farther from the truth. If anything, the best online courses provide a sense of instructor presence that is felt more keenly by the student and can provide a greater amount of human interaction and personal mentorship than most instructors in a f2f course can ever hope to do.

    JGA

  • Invigorating and Infuriating Discussion
  • Posted by Stacey Simmons , Associate Director, Center for Computation & Technology at LSU on January 13, 2010 at 12:30pm EST
  • I would like to point out that I think it very interesting that all of the negative feedback regarding this article is being mediated by technology. For those of us who work in technology in universities, I would encourage you to wake up and watch what your students are doing and how they are learning. A technological solution that ASSUMES professors' and students' engagement is required. The university system cannot scale to meet the demand. It simply cannot. As a nation and a culture we are not creating enough PhDs to teach. We are doing a very poor job of educating those who do not have the constant financial resources. In short the system reinforces the status quo. In order to truly transform our culture, we must do something innovative and strategic. Universities, colleges, and community colleges can do the most if they reach as many students as possible, and help them graduate. We are only serving ourselves if we consider that the ultimate experience for the student to sit wide-eyed in our presence and listen to us talk. That is like say that the sun revolves around the earth. My students are on facebook when I lecture. They have their laptops open under the auspices of taking notes. Occasionally, one or two will hand write in a notebook. It is rare. Further, when they are out of the classroom, they are on google and wikipedia to do their research. We have to teach them how to learn FIRST, then worry about the media of the content.

  • Response to Stacey
  • Posted by Al on January 18, 2010 at 5:15pm EST
  • How they are learning or how they are NOT learning? I see little promise in technology for fundamental science teaching and learning. What has been done successfully over the decades in the non-wired classroom is not erased simply because pop-culture comes knocking on classroom doors with its multifarious gadgets and gimmicks. Fundamental science education yet requires the student put their mind up against ideas, concepts, and content--and yes, fundamental content for continuing academic growth IS what it is all about--science is a language and its rudiments are the most we are able to hope to successfully teach at the undergraduate level, without which rudiments graduate work where creativity begins to hope to assert itself will be nothing but an abysmal failure. Technology masquerading as a mediator between students and content is merely a red herring drug across the attention-span and discipline required by the student which remains the rate-limiting step to any successful learning whatsoever. If anything, technological gimmicks and the lure of moving images on computer screens (which are well nigh impossible to assess by any language-based testing instrument) are pop-culture distractions introduced either on an unproven, experimental basis, or moreoften by the zealous who themselves were not educated in the fundamental science disciplines, or if they were, chose to leave them because their heart wasn't in them in the first place.

    It may be that this mileage may vary in the humanities and social sciences, compared with fundamental science disciplines. If so, future discussions need to better take this into consideration. That one size would fit all immediately casts any arguments for sweeping transformations due to technology into the rubbish bin where they belong.

  • Pioneer in "open" model learning: Fielding Graduate University
  • Posted by Rochelle Santopoalo , CEO/Founder at Society of Certified Adjunct Faculty Educators on February 22, 2010 at 12:45pm EST
  • As an alumnus of Fielding Graduate University (HOD, 1996), I can testify first hand that the "open" model of learning is not for everyone. It works especially well with learners who have a high level of intrinsic motivation and who need minimal guidance to pursue learning outcomes. Having said that, the faculty at Fielding was experts at coaching/facilitating a customized learning plan for each learner. Regularly scheduled gatherings of learners/faculty/staff on a national and local level provided a strong learning community offering for those who desired the experience. Instead of pre-defined courses, each learner crafted a learning contract for Knowledge Area Modules (KAM), each having a study guide that provided boundaries for what you were expected to demonstrate to be considered competent in a subject.

    Graduates of Fielding are well-prepared to navigate the messy systems one encounters in the world of work. We emerge disciplined explorers. This level of learning outcome is a result of the program maintaining a learner-centered focus while providing the tools and support needed for learners to exceed self-limiting boundaries. This is an honorable outcome that higher education needs to pursue to ready learners for the boundless changes we face now and for years to come.