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From:
Mary Ann Dowdell <[log in to unmask]>
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Teaching Breakfast List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Wed, 19 Nov 2003 10:01:07 -0500
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That is very, very true Joanne.  As someone who has taught a graduate course on-line twice and will do it again in the spring with double the number of students, I am trying to figure out how to balance that fine line.  My colleagues who are teaching these students this semester are really struggling with the workload which is currently simply equal to 1 undergraduate traditional classroom based course. 

Mary Ann Dowdell

-----Original Message-----
From: Teaching Breakfast List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Curran, Joanne ([log in to unmask])
Sent: Wednesday, November 19, 2003 9:51 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: The Evolution of Distance Learning in Higher Education

We need to be afraid of the amount of work involved that is not compensated. Our faculty who are teaching on-line find that students are learning but they also find that they are spending significantly more time on the course. Unless we carefully look at the workload of providing courses on-line, we may find ourselves overwhelmed. Joanne

-----Original Message-----
From: Teaching Breakfast List [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Koeddermann, Achim ([log in to unmask])
Sent: Tuesday, November 18, 2003 5:07 PM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: The Evolution of Distance Learning in Higher Education

 

        Jim asked an intersting question at the UUP meeting - what do you think - do we have to fear DistantLearning?
        Achim

        TBers, 

        The posting below (a bit long) gives a quite complete 
        look at the beginning of distance education, its present, and the 
        author's predictions for the future. It is Chapter 1, The Evolution 
        of Distance Learning in Higher Education, in Distance Education: The 
        Complete Guide to Design, Delivery, and Improvement by Judith L. 
        Johnson. Published  by Teachers College Press, 
        [http://www.teacherscollegepress.com/] 234 Amsterdam Avenue, New 
        York, NY 10027. Copyright © 2003 by Teachers College, Columbia 
        University. Reprinted with permission. 

                        The Evolution of Distance Learning in Higher Education 

        Distance learning's past has emerged into a new entity. In the past 
        decade, higher education has taken on tools for learning faster than 
        at any other time in its history. Here we look at the beginning of 
        distance education, its present, and our predictions for the future. 

        The Past 

        Distance education, in some form, has been around for decades. Before 
        1900, the communication system of the Roman Empire set the stage for 
        distance learning, long before the idea of such a phenomenon was 
        conceived. Inventions during this time of the printing press and the 
        postal service made possible the printing of many copies of learning 
        materials to be distributed to many individuals. Correspondence 
        education began toward the end of the 19th century, and in the 20th 
        century, radio, telephone, cinema, television, programmed learning, 
        computers, and the Internet all became tools of the new method of 
        distributing education (Daniel, 2000). 

        Australia and New Zealand 

        In the 1930s, radio was first used to broadcast educational 
        programming to schools. Television became a medium of choice for 
        distance education in the 1960s, and today with the power, speed, and 
        versatility of the Internet, courses are offered anytime, anywhere. 

        During the 1930s radio as a medium was used to deliver educational 
        programming in Australia and New Zealand by the Australian 
        Broadcasting Company (ABC). In addition to program broadcasts, the 
        ABC provided financial assistance to the schools for the purchase of 
        radio receivers. "In 1935,21 percent of all Australian schools were 
        making regular use of radio. . . [programs]. By the mid 1950s usage 
        had risen to 90 percent" (Teather, 1989, p. 504). 

        In 1956, television was introduced in Sydney and Melbourne to deliver 
        educational programming to schools. The programs were used by 
        teachers to supplement their curricula and to provide access to 
        experiences that were beyond the resources of the schools (Gilmour, 
        1979). More comprehensive pro- grams ill math and science were 
        developed and broadcast to schools to address a teacher shortage in 
        these subjects. In the 1960s and 1970s, television broadcasting in 
        Australia increased significantly, and by 1972 more than 90% of all 
        schools in Australia were receiving and using both enrichment and 
        subject-specific television programs. 

        In the 1960s, when the Open University (OU) was being developed in 
        the United Kingdom, Australia had four universities that were 
        providing opportunities for part-time higher education study using 
        distance learning. At Massey University in New Zealand, approximately 
        12,000 students were en-rolled in several hundred courses. In the 
        1980s, more than 35,000 students were taking distance education 
        courses in Australia from approximately five universities and 30 
        colleges. In 1961, due to a short supply of evening classes at the 
        University of New South Wales, lectures were broadcast over radio to 
        part--time adult students in their homes. Problems arose with this 
        arrangement, however. The University's radio station obtained a 
        license to broadcast, but the "transmission frequency allotted . . . 
        was beyond the tuning range of an ordinary radio receiver, so 
        students had to have their receivers modified" (Teather, 1989, p. 
        506). But this did not solve the problem completely. The power 
        provided to the University radio station (which was about half the 
        power of a nearby non-University station) did not allow for clear 
        transmission of the audio. Thus, students ended up hearing only half 
        of the transmission. To remedy these problems, the University 
        established centers where students could gather to listen to 
        broadcasts and have discussion groups afterward. Those who could not 
        attend the sessions were mailed broadcast tapes. By 1966, the 
        University added television programming to its radio programming to 
        offer courses to extension centers. The courses were delivered using 
        a combination of the two media and supplemented by notes and diagrams 
        that were mailed to students before the broadcasts. Student-led 
        discussions and live seminars supported the learning activities. This 
        arrangement became known as the Division of Postgraduate Extension 
        Studies, and by 1982 more than 2,300 students were enrolled in the 
        broad-cast courses. An additional 2,700 participated in courses in 
        which audio- and videocassettes of the same courses were offered. 

        Eventually distribution of higher education courses in Australia and 
        New Zealand became satellite-based. In 1985 and 1986, domestic 
        Austra-lian communication satellites were launched and educational 
        networks were established. 

        The United States 

        Educational broadcasting in the United States evolved in a similar 
        fashion. In the 1920s, unsuccessful attempts were made to develop 
        broadcasting for educational and cultural purposes and to reserve 
        some radio channels for educational uses. It wasn't until the 1950s, 
        when states were faced with shortages of teachers and school 
        facilities, that instructional television was seen as a way to ease 
        these problems. "Local and state educational authorities established 
        stations using the reserved channels" (Lyle, 1989, p. 516). The 
        broadcasts were used to support classroom instruction, and most 
        programs were developed and produced by local teachers. With the 
        passage of Title VII of the National Defense Education Act of 1958, 
        educational broadcasting increased and appropriations by the 
        legislature provided support for projects in education. However, when 
        school enrollments began to decline in the 1970s and teachers were in 
        surplus, the broadcast medium for instruction declined as did local 
        production of programs for schools. 

        With respect to higher education, universities were among the first 
        to have radio stations back in the 1920s. University extension 
        programs were broadcast using these radio stations and have continued 
        ever since. Television became the medium of choice for the broadcast 
        programs in the 1960s. Many college and university systems developed 
        televised curricula to provide access for more individuals and to 
        reduce pressure on the physical plants. Systems and consortia alike 
        cooperated to deliver courses to the public. A 1979 survey by the 
        Corporation for Public Broad-casting (CPB) and the National Center 
        for Educational Statistics (NCES) "found that 25 percent of the 
        nation's colleges and universities offered courses for credit over 
        television and 36 percent of them used broadcast television to 
        supplement instruction" (Lyle, 1989, p. 516). A major turning point 
        in the distance education enterprise came in 1981 when Walter H. 
        Annenberg announced his $150 million gift over 15 years for the 
        development of university-level television programming. The CPB was 
        chosen as the agency to oversee the planning of the programming that 
        would be funded under this gift. 

        The United Kingdom 

        While these developments were occurring in the United States and 
        Australia, the United Kingdom officially opened the Open University 
        in 1971 (Cathcart, 1989). Primarily a correspondence institution, OU 
        used correspondence materials and text-books as its major resources 
        along with television broadcasts. The institution was open to any and 
        all who wished to partake of its educational opportunities. Working 
        closely with the British Broadcast Corporation, au paid for its own 
        production costs using revenue from the government's department of 
        education and science. 

            When the United Kingdom's Open University achieved higher 
        ratings for its teaching of 
            Engineering than Oxford, Cambridge, and the Imperial College, 
        London, it was a sign that 
            what had begun 30 years earlier as a radical and suspect 
        initiative for second--chance 
            students had now become a well-respected university. (Daniel, 2000) 

        Other Countries 

        The success of OU prompted other countries to adopt its model and 
        establish their own open universities. For example, in 1972 Spain 
        created the Universidad de Educación a Distancia using radio 
        broadcasts. Holland offered multimedia courses to its citizens via 
        television, and in 1977 Norway established an Institute for Distance 
        Education that coordinated and produced integrated multimedia courses 
        on topics of concern to its citizenry. Eventually Norway's live 
        broadcasts were recorded and distributed to interested constituencies 
        on cassettes. Their purpose came to focus more on- the materials than 
        on the broadcast. Likewise, Sweden's Utbildningsradion, established 
        in 1978, became responsible for preparing learning systems and 
        producing audiovisual educational media. Its main priority was to 
        produce programming for underserved, disadvantaged groups (e.g., the 
        mentally and physically challenged and individuals with limited 
        education). In addition to its broadcasts (both television and 
        radio), all programs were available on cassette, along with 
        educational materials to make up learning packages. These were 
        distributed to learning resource centers across Sweden. 

        These efforts and others were part of the foundation for today's 
        distance education, an evolution in the making. While some of the 
        programs and projects in broadcast education may not have been deemed 
        overly successful at the time, "research and experience leaves no 
        doubt that educational broadcasting can, particularly within 
        multimedia systems, be an effective educational instrument" (Lyle, 
        1989, p. 516). 

        As Sir John Daniel (2000), Vice Chancellor of Britain's Open 
        University, asserts: 

            . . . whereas in 1990 only a small proportion of tradi-tional 
        universities offered any 
            distance learning courses, by the year 2000 very few did not 
        have such offerings. Today no 
            self respecting university president can admit to not 
        offering courses online. 

        (For a comprehensive account of early educational broadcasting, see 
        chapters by Inquai, Hurst, Teather, Lyle, Hill, Cathcart, and O'Brien 
        in Eraut, 1989.) 

        Today 

        Distance learning is the most significant phenomenon occurring in 
        higher education today. Everywhere one looks, whether in community 
        colleges, 4-year institutions, Ivy League colleges, research 
        institutions, or technical colleges, distance education is on the 
        rise, and the rise is occurring at a rapid pace. Distance education 
        and technology are major factors in the contribution to current and 
        expected changes in the postsecondary education enterprise. 

            Distance education is expected to grow at a compound annual 
        growth rate of 33 percent, 
            according to Inter-national Data Corporation. Analysis 
        predicts that distance education 
            demand will increase from five percent of all higher 
        education students in 1998 to 15 
            percent by 2002. [Indeed] . . . the reported growth rates 
        (from 1999-2000 to 2000-2001) 
            range from 200 percent (Pennsylvania State University's World 
        Campus) to over 1,000 
            percent (University of Mary-land's University College) today. 
        (Oblinger, Barone, & 
            Hawkins, 2001, p. 11) 

        Never before in the history of higher education has there been a 
        change that has had such an impact on those involved in this 
        enterprise. According to Peter Drucker, "Universities won't survive. 
        The future is outside the traditional campus, outside the traditional 
        classroom. Distance learning is coming on fast" (Gibson & Herrera, 
        1999, p. 57). 

        The idea and advent of distance education have been instrumental in 
        producing a range of emotions in those involved in higher education. 
        Many faculty are resistant; some are confused; others are excited 
        about the new realm of possibilities for their teaching. Some worry 
        about the future of their livelihood; others see this change as an 
        opportunity to expand their pedagogy and teaching opportunities. 
        Critics of distance education say that this mode is inferior to the 
        more traditional face-to-face, campus-based learning, where discourse 
        is spontaneous and inter-active, and where the faculty can see the 
        students and pick up nonverbal body language such as facial 
        expressions. Skeptical faculty argue that part of the learning 
        experience is the connection made between student and student, and 
        student and professor, or the experience of community. However, "in 
        all fairness, there are few studies that measure the effectiveness of 
        textbooks and lectures as an educational delivery system" (Oblinger, 
        Barone, & Hawkins, 2001, p. 19). But because of the newness of 
        technology and the uncertainty of its use in educating students, 
        institutions are held captive by questions related to its use. 

        Proponents of distance learning, on the other hand, argue that 
        distance education technologies allow for increased access to a 
        variety of courses. Distance education offers the student more 
        convenience in scheduling classes, decreases travel time to and from 
        a campus, and allows for student control over when participation in 
        classes will occur (Johnson, 1999a). Furthermore, distance learning 
        technology, such as the Web, is 

            the first medium that honors the notion of multiple 
        intelligences-abstract, textual, visual, 
            musical, social, and kinesthetic. Educators can now construct 
        learning environments that 
            enable [a student] to become engaged in learning any way the 
        student chooses. The anytime, 
            anyplace nature of the Web allows students to spend as much 
        time as they need searching 
            for in-formation, running simulations, or collaborating with 
        peers. (Oblinger, Barone, & 
            Hawkins, 2001, p. 5) 

        Some have found that this new way of delivering higher education is 
        just as good as traditional ways, and maybe even better (Daniel, 
        2000; Johnson, 1999b). In fact, as Sir John Daniel (2000) stated in a 
        speech to attendees at the Taiwan Conference on Distance Learning: 

            Open universities have learned how to carry out distance 
        education successfully at scale 
            and I emphasize that this is not merely a technological 
        success. Through the principle of 
            course team we have become better at teaching than 
        conventional universities, on both 
            academic and pedagogical grounds. 

        Some say that students in distance education courses are more engaged 
        with the learning process and that interaction happens more than in 
        traditional face-to-face courses (Carnevale, 2000b; Marchese, 2000). 
        Researchers also have found that distance education is "more 
        effective than the classroom lecture and the traditional relationship 
        between student and faculty member" (Oblinger, Barone, & Hawkins, 
        2001, p. 6). 

        A large body of research touts that there are no significant 
        differences between the learning out- comes of distance education and 
        those of classroom-based education (Epper, 1996; Oblinger, Barone, & 
        Hawkins, 2001; Weigel, 2000). 

            [But] why [argue some] hold up lecture-based class-room 
        education as the benchmark for 
            evaluating new educational delivery systems? . . . If there 
        is no significant difference 
            between distance education and class-room-based education, 
        advocates of distance 
            education should hardly trumpet this claim; they should be 
        deeply troubled by it. How could 
            they think of making the status quo the standard for 
        evaluating learning technologies that 
            have so much more to offer? (Weigel, 2000, p. 12) 

        With distance learning technologies, teachers can develop new 
        teaching methodologies rather than adapting old pedagogy to their 
        distance courses. The Web is a "fundamentally new medium for 
        education with the potential to birth new pedagogical methods" 
        (Weigel, 2000, p. 12). 

        Charles M. Cook, director of the New England Association of Schools 
        and Colleges' Commission on Institutions of Higher Education, 
        comments on distance learning. He asserts that this mode of delivery 
        "can provide a more active learning environment for students than 
        traditional education by engaging the student with interactive 
        technology, instead of relying on a professor's lecture" (Carnevale, 
        2000d). He feels that this type of educational delivery is more 
        learner-centered than traditional delivery. In fact, in a survey of 
        faculty, findings revealed that they "believed web-based courses do a 
        better job of giving students access to information, helping them 
        master the subject, and addressing a variety of learning styles" 
        (Oblinger, Barone, & Hawkins, 2001, p. 19). ' 

            The Web . . . can also be a great new medium for deeper forms 
        of learning. . . . The 
            beautiful thing is that today's technologies, with their 
        incredible abilities to connect, 
            search, engage, and individualize, to prompt performance and 
        assess understanding, are--in 
            the hands of a teacher with the right ambitions--terrific 
        enablers for [deep learning]. 
            (Marchese, 2000, p.4) , 

        Distance education serves the needs of not only the traditional-age 
        college student, but also the most rapidly growing segment of the 
        population, adult learners over the age of 35 years who have 
        full-time jobs, families, and limited discretionary time. A re-port 
        by the American Council on Education Center for Policy Analysis and 
        Educause (Oblinger, Barone, & Hawkins, 2001) cites seven distinct 
        audiences for distance learning: corporate learners, professional 
        enhancement learners, degree-completion adult learners, college 
        experience learners (or the traditional student), precollege (K-12) 
        learners, remediation and test-preparation learners, and recreational 
        learners (Oblinger, Barone, & Hawkins, 2001). 

        Distance education has touched a majority of institutions of higher 
        education in the United States over the past 5 years. USA Today 
        (Snapshots, 2000) reports that 75% of U.S. institutions of higher 
        education now offer distance education courses and pro-grams, and 35% 
        have accredited distance education programs. It appears, however, 
        that public institu-tions are using the distance mode of delivery 
        much more than are private institutions. 

        In 1997, 79% of public 4-year institutions and 72 % of public 2-year 
        institutions offered distance education courses, compared with 22 % 
        of private 4-year institutions and 6% of private 2-year ones 
        (Carnevale, 2000a, p. A57). Currently, institutions with more than 
        10,000 students (87%) are more likely to offer distance education 
        courses than those with between 3,000 and 10,000 students (75%), or 
        those with fewer than 3,000 students (19%) (Carnevale, 2000a, p. 
        A57). These numbers are likely to increase substantially over the 
        next decade with all the advances in technology and the growing 
        demand by the public for convenient and flexible educational 
        opportunities. 

        In this age of technology, future college students (e.g., today's 
        children) have and are using computers in their schools. "Today's 
        students, increasingly comfortable with technology, expect online 
        resources (a digital library, Web resources, simulations, video) as 
        part of the learning tools and learning experience" (Green, 1997, p. 
        4). In fact, colleges and universities of today are "dealing with the 
        first generation of students who have never known life without PCs 
        (created in the '70s) or the Internet (largely a '90s phenomenon)" 
        (Oblinger, Barone, & Hawkins, 2001, p. 26). Students entering higher 
        education today have the knowledge and skills to use technology that 
        exceed those of faculty and staff working in higher education (Bleed, 
        2000). Students are not only computer literate, they are 
        "technophilic" (Cini & Vilic, 1999, p. 38). 

        Over the past 2 decades, communication using information technologies 
        has gone from using over-head projectors, audiovisual media, slides, 
        and the viewing of prerecorded public television programs, to the 
        delivery of instruction using interactive technologies and 
        asynchronous modes, with degree pro-grams offered to students 
        worldwide. Changes in technology today are constant, and faculty, 
        staff, and administrators must keep pace with new technologies to 
        ensure that their students receive the best that education has to 
        offer. 

        REFERENCES available on request. 

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