copyright 2012 everspring inc. all rights reserved proprietary and confidential september 2012...
TRANSCRIPT
Copyright 2012 Everspring Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED Proprietary and Confidential
September 2012
Innovator Spotlight
League for Innovation in the Community College
Ken Udas
A Little Background
Commitment to Education
• Interprofessional Education• Service Integration
A Little Background
First, I was a teacher…
• University of Maryland, European Division• Comenius University• The International University of Vienna
A Little Background
…then I became an administrator
• Harcourt• Spotfire• USAID/Carana• Open Polytechnic• SUNY Learning Network• Penn State World Campus• UMassOnline• Everspring
A Little Background
…So, generally why would those organizations invest in online learning?
And why would these in particular?• Open Polytechnic of New Zealand• State University of New York• Everspring
… and what do I think that have I learned?
Kia ora
Never a Missed Opportunity
Online learning is an opportunity for all of us to rethink those things we have wanted to do in any event:
Deliver…
• high quality academic programming• high quality and relevant student services• high quality and relevant faculty development and support
With…
• excellent learner outcomes• active and proactive engagement with continuous improvement• and engagement with as many learners as possible…
Oh, and we really want to create access.
Experience
We want to create a great experience.
We can avoid this:
Good Practice
It’s about making decisions that lead to learner success.• Recruiting • “Onboarding”
– Admissions– Preparation– Advising and Ongoing Support– Registration
• Academic– Learning Design– Course Development– Instruction
• Analytics (data for decisions)• Course Assessment• Faculty Support (Development, Help Desk, Incentives)
Good Practice
Obviously, good online learning practice is an organizational commitment.
My best advice is to identify a quality metric and use it for
guidance. My favorite is the eLearning Maturity Model (eMM), which will help build organizational
capacity to deliver results and improve practice.
This sounds hard! I can’t get any
commitments from my school. I would not
know where to start…
Basics of eMM
The eLearning Maturity Model is a way of engaging in continuous improvement.
Processes: What should a mature organization be doing?
Dimensions: How should the organization be doing them?
Assessment: How is the Organization doing them?
Interpretation: How do we know what needs work?
Process is Capacity
• Learning: Processes that directly impact on the pedagogy of online learning.
• Development: Processes surrounding the development and maintenance of online learning resources.
• Support: Processes surrounding the oversight and management of online learning.
• Evaluation: Processes surrounding the evaluation and quality control of online learning throughout its entire life cycle.
• Organization: Processes associated with institutional planning and management.
Some Processes are Better than Others
The Dimensions represent the level of capacity the organization has to manage the processes that provide deliverables.
We do Some Things Better than Others
We need to assess how well we are doing things. eMM uses color coding to represent the level of adequacy.
I see, so this must be evidence
based.
Understanding Leads to Improvement
When it all comes together, we can identify where our processes can be improved.
Learning Design
This is really basic…• Always let learners know what they are in for
(comprehensive and accurate syllabi)
• Always connect the dots (Learning Objectives – Content – Activities – Resources – Assessment).
• Make it easy for learners to know what they are going to learn, how they will learn it, and how you will know that they have learned it.
And really, there are a lot of ways to improve learning outcomes.
Improving Outcomes
All of these techniques can be done online:• Mastery Learning • Tutoring (there is nothing like one-on-one attention)• Prerequisite Review and Mastery • Student Peer Support Systems • Reading and Study Skills • Preorganizers / Advanced Organizers• Enhanced Cues, Participation & Reinforcement • Active / Engaged Learning• Social Presence • Ostranenie "defamiliaration"
That’s way too much.
Scale
Given that we know that education is not “one size fits all,” our systems need to Scale Up…
Scale
… and they need to effectively Scale Down.
Ok, where are we going to put
everybody? There is not enough parking.
Three Areas of Traditional Constraint
There are patterns…• Services: Services (academic and student) scale through the creation of
effective workflows, which is informed through accurate use of data.
• Learning Design & Course Development: Course design and development is an academic activity, but at scale tends to require non-academic support.
• Instruction: Instruction is scaled through a combination of increasing teaching capacity through volume (increasing resources for instructional staffing), effective use of technology, and intentional instructional design.
Three Common Approaches
There are three (more or less) common approaches to scaling:• Increase Instructional Staffing: Throwing more
resource at it (just keep on doing what you have always done, but do more of it).
• Master Courses: Design standard classes that can support multiple sections.
• Open Educational Resources (OER): Allows for independent study.
• Massive Openly Online Courses (MOOCs): These are large courses taught by a single professor (with perhaps some support) to tens of thousands of “students.”
Ok, so how do these
effectively scale?
There are a number of answers…