Archives For Online Learning

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Source: deathtothestockphoto.com

Progression of Blended, Online & Mobile Learning

I built my first blended learning course in 1994 and started teaching fully online in 1995 and in the past twenty years I have seen steady progress in the use and acceptance of online learning. Unfortunately, I have always been overly optimistic and have believed that well designed online learning could radically improve our educational systems. When the smartphone started to hit saturation levels in north america and mobile learning hit the peak of its hype cycle in 2010/11 I was further encouraged that the notion of “all the time and anywhere” learning had finally become widely accepted. The forward momentum of mobile learning was abruptly interrupted by the latest disruptor to higher education–MOOCS

MOOC Hype

The MOOC hype started in earnest in 2011 and was in full force with formation of Udacity, Coursera, edX and several other content/course delivery organizations in 2012. Many higher education administrators and proponents of the MOOC hype claimed that the disruptive aspect of MOOCs would not only change education but that it would bring an end to traditional education. Many of these claims are similar to the claims made in the mid 1990’s and early 2000’s when the online learning pioneers started to take advantage of the potential of the internet. The reality of immature learning management systems, poor or missing instructional design, abysmal completion rates (often in the single digits) and the high costs of MOOCs have significantly quenched the MOOC hype.

Reality Check – Its Still About The Learning

The latest figures that come from the Babson Survey Research Group’s annual survey, which was based on a 2014 survey of more than 2,800 academic leaders, reveals:

MOOCs are no longer considered a useful tool to learn about online pedagogy
MOOCs pedagogy

MOOCs are not sustainable
MOOCs Sustainable

Education costs, learning outcomes, and competency based education are much more important than MOOCs
MOOCs Importance

The Babson survey also reveals that academic leaders believe that some aspects of online learning are positive:

  • Online education has become mission-critical, even at small colleges.
  • “Hybrid” courses are at least as good as face-to-face courses.

The survey reveals that most professors still don’t think online courses are legit so whether the adverse effects of the MOOC hype are a contributing factor or that faculty just have not learned how or received the professional development to build effective online learning environments, even in 2015 we  still have a long way to go before online learning is fully accepted.

Read the full report…

Stuck in the wash

Dwayne Harapnuik —  November 25, 2014 — Leave a comment

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Source: https://www.travelers.com/iw-images/resources/Individuals/Large/DrivingInRainWind_large.jpg

Commuting in heavy rain is a normal part of living in North Vancouver and working in Burnaby. The other morning I was stuck behind a driver in a relatively new Mercedes who didn’t have enough confidence to drive past the rainy turbulence (wash) of an eighteen wheeled truck. Rather than deal with the spray or wash from the eighteen wheeler for a few seconds while passing the truck this driver chose to stay one lane over and beside the truck–in the truck’s blind spot and in the worst spray for way too long and too many kilometers. Not only was this dangerous for the driver of the Mercedes and the truck it put many other drivers at risk who were trapped behind these two vehicles. When the opportunity presented itself I managed to get around this dangerous blockage and noted that the Mercedes driver chose to stay in the truck’s wash and in the blind spot.

I acknowledge that driving past an eighteen wheeler in heavy rain can be somewhat unnerving. The truck sprays out so much water that your vehicle’s wipers become overloaded and you are almost driving blind for a second or two. You have to trust your driving ability and have enough confidence in your ability that you can maintain the right path past the truck. Once you push past the truck you only have to deal with the rain itself and can see a clear path ahead.

The fear of pushing past the wash from the truck reminds me of a situation that we are currently facing in Higher Education. The 2014 Inside Higher Ed/Gallup Survey of Faculty Attitudes on Technology reveals that despite the experimentation with online education many faculty fear that the record-high number of students taking those classes are receiving an inferior experience to what can be delivered in the classroom. Why? Whether faculty have experience in teaching online or have not taught online the majority of faculty believe that online classes are worse than face2face classes because they perceive student interaction inside class being much poorer online.

belief-online courses

The above table points to several aspects of student to Professor interaction and vise versa that is perceived to be poorer online. To be fair to these Professors I think they are right. I have a suspicion that deep down they already know that since their primary form of instructional delivery in the face2face setting is the lecture, their level of interaction in traditional classes is already quite poor and if they carry this same type of interaction forward into the online realm they are right to worry that their online classes will be poorer.

Research conducted by Finkelstein, Seal, & Schuster revealed that 76% of the 172,000 faculty across North America surveyed use lecture as their primary instructional methodology. Lecturing is simply a passive form content delivery that all too often involves very little active student engagement. I will acknowledge that there are some exceptional Professors who have a high level of discussion in their classes and others who use active learning instructional methodologies but the data suggests that they are the minority. Additional research by Nunn in the form of monitoring Professors in their classes also revealed that at most three minutes out of a fifty minute class are actual discussion and most often in the form of questions at the end of class.

Unfortunately, many Professors initial experience with or understanding of online learning is that is it simply a way to use technology to deliver content. Whether content delivery is done face2face or online it is still the predominant form of instruction in the post secondary setting. Not enough Professors view learning as an active and dynamic process in which learners construct new ideas or concepts based upon their current/past knowledge. The making of meaningful connections is key to the learning and knowing and until we take the advice of people like Sir Ken Robinson and many other highly regarded educational experts and have a Learning Revolution, our current limited face2face information transfer model will simply be moved online.

So, since most Professors are involved in delivering content with very little interaction or engagement in the face2face setting is there any wonder why those Professors who haven’t taught online would see online courses as being even less effective? Similarly, since many Professors who move online continue to use content delivery as their primary form of instruction is there any wonder why these Professors also view online courses as further limiting their already limited face2face student engagement?

Until we can change the way that Professors view their role and move away from the passive information transfer model to an active and dynamic process in which learners construct their own knowledge; and until we can change the way the way most Professors view themselves as the “sage on the stage” to the “guide on the side” or as a learning facilitators who create significant learning environments in which their students can come to know something, acquire knowledge, or to gain information and experience we can continue to expect to see these types of attitudes about online courses from faculty surveys.

This change of focus isn’t going to be easy. Due to a lack of formal training in active learning and all too often limited professional development many Professors are stuck in conducting their classes the same way that they experienced it when they were in school. This is very similar to the way that the Mercedes driver I referred to in my rain example was stuck in the wash behind the large truck–they didn’t have enough confidence in their own ability to push past the truck to see a clear path.

So once again it is not about the technology it is about the learning. Online technology is only a tool that can be used to enhance learning. But if our Professors are focused on teaching and disseminating information and not on creating significant learning environments then it doesn’t matter what tool we add to the mix, the student still loses out.

Finkelstein, M. J., Seal, R. K., and Schuster, J. The New Academic Generation: A Profession in Transformation. Baltimore: The Johns Hopkins University Press, 1998.

Nunn, C. E. “Discussion in the College Classroom: Triangulating Observational and Survey Results.” Journal of Higher Education, 1996, 67 (3), 243-66.

Richard Lyons, dean of the University of California at Berkeley’s Haas School of Business says:

“Half of the business schools in this country could be out of business in 10 years—or 5.”

This isn’t an empty prediction. It is a stark reality especially when you consider what Robert Lytle, partner in the education practice at Parthenon Group, warns:

“Once you get out of the top tier of schools, you’re either already online, on your way there, or dead in the water.”

While this is a bold statement it does ring true when you consider that Indiana University’s Kelley School of Business which launched an online MBA program in 1999 now has 1,072 students enrolled in their online MBA program–more than double the number in the school’s regular two-year program.

Perhaps an even more significant factor contributing to the need to move programs online is the level of daily online utilization in world around us. Internet banking, ticket purchases, merchandise overnighted from Amazon and so many more daily aspects of our lives are being served online at the times that are convenient for us.

This really became clear in the past few weeks after I started watching the news on cable TV once again. Because of several moves in the past couple of years we haven’t subscribed to cable TV. But now that we are settled down in one location for the foreseeable future and Shaw offered a 6 month free trial TV cable package as an addition to our internet connection, I have been watching several news channels. These channels haven’t really changed all the much in the past few years except that they all point to Twitter as a way to keep up with the breaking news, their websites have matured and now offer virtually all the same content one can watch on TV and they use Skype or other video conferencing tools to regularly to bring in experts from all over the world to comment the news.

If the major news channels and networks have recognized that we all demand control over how we consumer the daily news and expect to have best experts Skype into the conversation in real time is there any wonder that this same level expectation will extend to the way that we are educated. I have been teaching online since 1995 and have been promoting a student-centered approach to creating significant learning environments and I am excited to see that online learning has matured to the point where we can now address the most significant aspect of this type of learning–giving the learner control over the time, place and context in which they wish to learn.

The schools that get this are already online or are well on their way to getting there. The rest will be dead in the water. What category will your school fall into? Are you part of the problem or part of the solution? What are you doing about this?

Read the full Bloomberg article…

online learning trends
Source: elearninginfographics.com

Despite erroneously suggesting that MOOCs were invented in 2013 Anant Agarwal, the President of edX — Harvard’s and MIT’s collaborative MOOC venture and the instructor of the first edX course on circuits and electronics, points to some key aspects of the edX courses which contribute to student achievement. These include:

  • Active Learning – Lessons are interleaved sequences of videos and interactive exercises.
  • Self Pacing – Students can hit the pause button or even rewind the professor.
  • Instant Feedback – Students can try to apply answers. If they get it wrong, they can get instant feedback. They can try it again and try it again until they great it right, and this really becomes much more engaging.
  • Gamification – You can engage students much like they design with Legos…the learners are building a circuit with Lego-like ease. And this can also be graded by the computer.
  • Peer Learning – Students answer each others questions in the online forums and the Prof confirms the right answer. Students are learning from each other and that they are learning by teaching.

A well designed online course that provides the opportunity for active learning, self pacing, instant feedback and peer interaction can contribute toward student achievement and success. As we can see from John Hattie’s examples below of Teaching Effects several of the edX effects make the the top fo Hattie’s list:

visible-learning-teaching-effects

Rather ask if online learning is working perhaps we should be asking if we are getting these same effects in our traditional classrooms.