Monday, December 8, 2008

Online Learning Resources

Not sure, can we provide directory in a blog? Over the semester I came across few websites of interest. I just wrote short description and what interested me in these sites. Here you go......

a. ) Journals associated with Distance Education

1. International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning
The International Review of Research in Open and Distance Learning is a journal in which readers can inform themselves about distance education developments in theory, research, and best practices in the field of distance learning.

http://www.irrodl.org/


2. The Journal of Distance Learning Administration
The Journal of Distance Learning Administration is a peer-reviewed electronic journal offered free each quarter over the Internet.

http://www.westga.edu/%7Edistance/jmain11.html


b. ) Websites which provide resources on Distance Education

1. The Distance Learning Network
This website has various information including DE accreditation.

http://www.distancelearningnet.com/


2. elearners
It has information on available online degrees and other resources.

http://www.elearners.com/


3. accreditedclass
This site has searchable directory restricted to regionally accredited universities offering distance learning degrees.

http://www.accreditedclasses.com/


3. ) Associations, Organizations in Distance Education


1. The DETC Accrediting Commission
This accrediting commission is recognized by the Council for Higher Education.

http://www.detc.org/


2. Global Network Academy
This is a non-profit organization whose purpose is the research and development of open source tools those promote distance learning.

http://www.gnacademy.org/


3. The American Distance Education Consortium (ADEC)
ADEC is a national consortium of state universities and land grant institutions providing high quality and economic distance education programs and services via the latest and most appropriate information technologies.

http://www.adec.edu/


4.) Major providers of Distance Education in Higher Ed, K-12 or Business


1. The University of Maryland University College (UMUC)
With headquarters in Adelphi, Maryland, UMUC has an extensive distance learning program.

http://www.umuc.edu/gen/virtuniv.html


2. The University of Phoenix
This is a for-profit university, founded in 1976, that specializes in adult education. It is currently the world's largest private university, with over 100,000 students in its online programs.

http://www.phoenix.edu/


3. Open University, UK
The largest distance education university in the UK was founded in 1969.

http://www.open.ac.uk/

4. University of South Africa
One of the oldest distance education universities is the University of South Africa, which has been offering DE courses since 1946.

http://www.unisa.ac.za/

5. FernUniversität in Hagen
In Germany the FernUniversität in Hagen was founded 1974. It has an extensive distance learning program.

http://www.fernuni-hagen.de/

Rubric for Evaluating Online Asynchronous Discussion

In our class discussions also in one of the in-class activities Rubric for Evaluating Online Asynchronous Discussion was discussed. Here are some criteria I found would be useful....

1. Did the learner posted adequate number of responses?
For obvious reason. Eventually students have to be evaluated and would receive a grade.

2. Did the learner’s reference reading materials demonstrate knowledge of the subject?
A good, reliable, and bona-fide source has no substitute in knowledge building.

3. Did the learner use appropriate examples?
Examples would cause learners to think critically and would give a clear view of the subject matter.

4. Did the learner demonstrate some logical thinking?

5. Did the learner participate online in a timely manner?

6. Did the learner build social rapport by engaging other learners with her post?

7. Did the learner structure statements well and demonstrate use of grammar?

8. Did the learner’s discussion demonstrate scholarly aptitude?

9. Did the learner’s discussions raise creative and/or original concepts that participants freely argued/debated/discussed?

10. Did the learner’s quality of the responses match the level of instruction?

Saturday, December 6, 2008

Outcome of the Special Topic Discussion

At the end of the my special topic presentation we talked about different universities converting F2F course to online course: What would be the correct methodology to apply when converting a traditional course to an online setting?

I believe, as some of my fellow students mentioned, we should conduct a needs assessment or some initial planning and analysis on the part of the instructional designer. We should determining whether it is feasible to convert the course to an online one. If it is suitable, there may revisions and updates required. We should not forget the stakeholders and their interests. In addition, we need to do a task analysis to assist in implementing the best instructional strategy. I think, it is important to understand the learner characteristics in the analysis phase. Last, but not least, it is crucial to determine the financial constraints involved in converting the course to online. Of course, the best way to do this would be to create a budget.

Another important requirement is the need to provide instructor and student support for teaching and learning in this new environment. If the instructor does not have the necessary support, it is almost certain the conversion initiative will not be successful. Other issues to take into consideration are the content to be included, the level of interactivity (to ensure active and engaging learning), and ways to incorporate constructive learning techniques for the learner.

In essence, the analysis phase of instructional design may be the most important part of an online conversion project. Also, instructional designers should be highly cognizant of the instructor’s new role as a facilitator in the online environment and include support for the instructor in the design phase of the conversion project.

To be precise to get the endevour going I would target following three sectors. Some of them require more budget allocation some don't:

1. Provide Incentive:
- Pay raise or bonus is a perfect incentive.
- Other low-cost incentives would include recognition.
- Those who will convert their courses to DE will have guarantee to continue with their
courses longer period of time (i.e. they will have some kind of job security and
ownership of the courses they have built).

2. Provide Training:
- In addition to attending the in-house training I would urge Instructors to attend
college where Distance Education courses are taught. And, they will be
fully reimbursed. These courses will make many instructors interested in DE and
fear-factor will be eliminated to some extent.

3. Provide Assistance:
-Promise to provide FIT to those who will adopt DE.
-Allocate hours of in-house technical support specifically for DE courses.

Misc. Online Course Experiences

1. We had a situation where we wanted help from another department to start a joint degree. Both of the departments didn't have resources to implement it unilaterally. But, the other party insisted they would join the endeavor if only the degree is granted under their department. We found it would not help us much. It went on months long negotiation...... Then on a good day we struck a deal...both of us will have their own degree but we will share resources. Now both the departments have new degrees, basically they are the same, but in different names.

2. Long ago..I recall a news that Shaquille O'Neal received his Master's degree from the Univ. of Phoenix. They showed the graduation ceremony. I think this is a great form of advertisement for them to have such a well-known individual come out of their program. I don't remember what degree he received, but I don't think it really matters. I'm sure the convenience factor played a big role in his decision to get his degree from this institution. He is always on the road, and he may switch teams at any times, so he would be living in a different cities, and not always able to attend "brick and mortar" classes.

Thursday, December 4, 2008

My Special Topic In-Class Activity

I tried to incorporate an in-class activity to my special topic presentation - Security Issues in Online Assessment. The objective was to weigh the value of an online degree in light of security issues is heavily debated and under a lot of scrutiny. To address these concerns online universities are pushing to get accreditation. In response to the growth of DE and Online degrees the Education Department is finding ways to help students make informed choices.

I described the Scenario as below: "You are an instructor. A student comes to you for advice. She is considering enrolling in a Masters program at an Online University. Should she do that? Or should she go to a traditional brick-and-mortar school? What would you say to her? What considerations would you bring into the conversation? You could choose to be an advocate of DE, or not. Please construct your argument in light of security issues."

It is interesting to note that most responded the questions with some conditions. If the conditions are met the student in question was advised to attend the online course, otherwise, she was advised to attend the brick and mortar institution. Overall the online degree was considered a second choice.

Some participants also raised some very subtle issues. Like a fully online institution versus a brick and mortar institution offering part of its courses online. There was a good discussion about the perception of online degree. Some participants argued that personal preferences, job opportunity, time commitment, ability to participate in an online course are major factors in deciding which path to pursue. The issue of technological prerequisites for enrolling in a distance learning course was also brought up.

Some participants went deep and analyzed the issue in detail. Like while most of the discussion was revolving around the value of the online degree in general, some mentioned that it is important to find out if a degree is valued in a specific area of work.

Some discussed the tricky issue of academic transcript. It was revealed that most, if not all, brick and mortar institutions do not reveal the nature of the course in the student transcript. Almost all participants predicted that eventually distance education will "catch up" with other modes of education.

There are also suggestions about 'how we can speed up the acceptability of online education'. The tone of the forum was to support it by enrolling in it.

There are also discussions about 'diploma mills' and rampant fraudulent degrees. The general tone of the diccussion was that these 'institutions' are one of the reasons of bringing 'wrong' perception about online learning. Enforcement of accreditation is the solution suggested. There are also consideration that an online degree from a premier institution may note deem inferior to a degree from an ‘average’ brick and mortar institution. Though the conversation did not take the intended path of security issues in DE there were cross-references between the responses which made the whole discussion a truly integrated one.