190 likes | 361 Views
Higher Education and Online Learning Interim Study October 10, 2013. A Little Context…. Online learning is not new…its just moving into the mainstream of higher education…and the MOOC ‘mania’ has moved it into mainstream media. Oklahoma Higher Education Televised Instruction System.
E N D
Higher Education and Online Learning Interim Study October 10, 2013
A Little Context… Online learning is not new…its just moving into the mainstream of higher education…and the MOOC ‘mania’ has moved it into mainstream media.
Oklahoma Higher Education Televised Instruction System
A Few National Statistics about Online Learning… From the Fall 2003 to Fall 2010 • 3,029,430 Increase in overall enrollments in higher education. • 1,513,103 Increase in number of students taking all courses online. • Online represents 49.9% of all new enrollments. • Of the 1 million plus faculty nationwide, 378,000 teach online courses. • 575,000 teach either online or a blend of online and face-to-face instruction.
A Few National Statistics about Online Learning… • 3,800 of approximately 4,400 higher education institutions have some form of online offerings. • 1,200 have course-only offerings – not full online degree programs. • 2,600 offer full online degree programs.
A Few National Statistics about Online Learning… • In 2002 • Approximately 17.5 million total postsecondary students • Approximately 1.6 million students in online courses • Approximately 9% of students enrolled in online courses • In 2011 • Approximately 20.5 million total postsecondary students • Approximately 6.7 million students in online courses • Approximately 33% of students enrolled in online courses
A Few National Statistics about Online Learning… Overall Enrollment
Oklahoma Online Statistics • In the 2012-2013 Academic Year • Online Courses • 143 degree programs of studies offered system-wide public institutions. • 5,772 college courses available system-wide. • 7,300+ sections of online courses • Enrollment • 109,480 students enrolled in 253,821 online courses. • 739,855 student credit hours generated toward degree completion.
What are MOOCs? • By Definition: MOOCs are an online course aimed at large-scale interactive participation and open access via the web. In addition to traditional course materials such as videos, readings, and problem sets, MOOCs provide interactive user forums that help build a community for the students, professors, and teaching assistants.
Why the Recent Hype? • MOOCs…Massive Open Online Courses have stoked the hysteria and debate • Serving huge numbers of students • For Free • For College Credit • Provided by world-class faculty at ‘prestige’ institutions.
What is the Reality about MOOCs… • Experimental • Large numbers of ‘enrollments’ but few completers. • Only approximately 10 percent complete the courses. • No business model. (but several being considered) • Utilize existing faculty from participating colleges and universities. • Some innovative instructional strategies are being deployed.
What is the Reality about MOOCs… • Seems to work well for students who are highly motivated. • Those with previous higher education experience. • Value as continuing education is the ability to update and refresh knowledge and skills. • Typically courses do not lead to a certificate or college degree credit. • Challenge to define what students actually learn in order to quantify the desired outcome.
Where are MOOCs Going? Implications for Traditional Colleges and Universities • Will impact how we think about instruction and delivery on our campuses, but will not be the demise of our traditional college campuses. • The role of the professor will change but they will remain the key to all instruction. • Change student engagement with faculty. • Foster reduction in time to degree. • Refocus attention on competency and less on ‘seat time’ in the classroom
Online Education Task Force • Created in the Fall of 2012 as a result of the: • Exponential growth of online education • Emergence of new methods of delivery • Potential to increase student accessibility • Potential to reduce costs to students • Members of the Task Force • Chairman John Massey, Regents Toney Stricklin, Jody Parker and Dr. Ron White along with Presidents, Faculty and Staff.
Online Education Task Force • Policy Audit Subcommittee • Review policies and eliminate hindrances • Admission • Tuition and fees • Course load limits • Intellectual Property
Online Education Task Force • E-Core Subcommittee • Learning Management Systems – Blackboard, Desire to Learn, eCampus, Moodle, Instructure Canvas. • Course Design – Quality Matters-type rubric • Course Content and Quality. • Assessment – Academic Integrity. • Faculty Development and Training.
Online Education Task Force • Courses and programs housed on the Electronic Campus of SREB. • Each course must be certified as meeting EC standards for content, quality and delivery. • Site is searchable. • Publicize link to SREB website.
Online Education Task Force • Online delivery is here to stay. • The future of MOOCs, SPOCs, SMOCs, etc. is unknown but they have changed the way we think about the delivery of education. • We must take advantage of the technologies and new learning tools being developed for new and not so new methods of delivery. • We must continually pursue ways to provide high quality and affordable education.
Higher Education and Online Learning Interim Study October 10, 2013