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2014 MCCVLC Distance Learning Administrators Survey. Results & Discussion. Who . Twenty-five submissions Alpena Community College Mid‐Michigan Community College Bay College Monroe County Community College Delta College Montcalm Community College
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2014 MCCVLC Distance Learning Administrators Survey Results & Discussion
Who • Twenty-five submissions • Alpena Community College Mid‐Michigan Community College • Bay College Monroe County Community College • Delta College Montcalm Community College • Glen Oaks Community College Mott Community College • Gogebic Community College Muskegon Community College • Grand Rapids Community College North Central Michigan College • Henry Ford Community College Northwestern Michigan College • Kalamazoo Valley CommCollege Oakland Community College • Kellogg Community College Schoolcraft College • Kirtland Community College St. Clair County Community College • Lake Michigan College Washtenaw Community College • Macomb Community College Wayne County CommCollege District West Shore Community College
Organization Structure • Reporting Line • 40% report to Chief Academic Officer (2012 - 37%)(2013 – 42%) • 24% report to Academic Dean (2012 - 30%)(2013 – 17%) • 12% report to Non-Academic Administrator (2012–4%)(2013 – 13%) • 16% report to President • ITC National Survey: more than 72 percent of respondents indicated they reported to the vice-president of academic affairs or to an academic dean.
Organizational Structure - 2014 In 2013: Centralized – 37%/Decentralized – 21%/Mix – 42% In 2012: Centralized – 33%/Decentralized – 26%/Mix – 33% In 2011: Centralized – 33%/Decentralized – 17%/Mix – 46% In 2010: Centralized – 48%/Decentralized – 19%/Mix – 33% In 2008: Centralized – 48%/Decentralized – 22%/ Mix – 30% In 2006: Centralized – 48%/Decentralized – 26%/ Mix – 26%
PersonnelFull-Time Staff in DE Program 2013 – Majority of Programs had 1 – 2 FT Employees 2012 – Majority of Programs had 0 – 2 FT Employees
PersonnelPart-time Staff in DE Program 2013 – Majority of programs had 1 – 4 (or more) pt staff 2012 - Majority of programs had 0 – 1 part-time staff
Program - Enrollments Fall 2013 online enrollment compared to Fall 2012
Program - Enrollments • What is the percentage of enrollment (credit/contact hr) that your institution’s online program is of the total enrollment for your institution? • Average: 18.75 (2012 - 15%) (2013 – 14.7%)Median: 13.7% (2012 - 15%) (2013 – 12.4%) • Nationally – ITC reports a modest growth of 5.2% in online course enrollments.
Program Enrollments • Demand for online courses
Program • LMS Switch • Just 2 colleges said “Yes” (8%) – Down from 26% in 2012 • Nationally, LMS switching down to 27% - ITC Survey
Programs • Assessment of course prior to offering • 76% have some assessment (2012 – 52%)(2013 – 73%) • Assessment of course after offering • 48% report having assessment practices at some point after course is first offered (2012 – 46%) • 24% report working on a review process • Offering online degrees • In 2014 – 60% offer online degrees (15 colleges) 3 have plans to • In 2013 – 58% said yes (14 colleges) • In 2012 – 48% said yes • In 2011 – 42% said yes • Nationally – 87% offer at least one online degree – ITC study
Program • Section enrollment caps for online
Program • Online remedial classes
Program • Online competency-based courses
Completion Rates Nationally – 45% claim retention is comparable to on-campus rates; 53% said retention is lower for online classes; 2 percent report retention is higher for online classes than for tradition instruction. ITC – 2013 Study
Student Authentication • 100% of respondents require authentic username/passcode access to course • Nationally – 100% have a similar requirement • Other options: • Proctored exams – 21 colleges • Nationally 18% require online students take at least one proctored exam • Plagiarism detections service – 9 colleges • Web browser lock-down service – 6 college • Student engagement w/academic integrity policy – 7 colleges • Authentic assessments – 2 colleges
Open Educational Resources • Impact on institutions • 46% - Very Little (50% - Nationally) • 21% - Significant (45% - Nationally) • 33% - Not Sure • Roadblocks to adoption • Faculty reluctance to use (20) • Lack of faculty awareness (16) (ITC – 76%) • Time needed to locate/evaluate resources (18) (ITC – 77%) • Credibility of sources (15) (ITC - 48%) • Lack of ancillary materials (11) (ITC – 30%) • Resistance from administration (2) (ITC – 13%)
Course Quality • Regarding course content and rigor – online courses compared to face-to-face traditional courses: • Superior to face-to-face traditional courses • MCCVLC Study – 2 responses, 8% • ITC Study – 14% • Equivalent to face-to-face traditional courses • MCCVLC Study – 17 responses, 68% • ITC Study – 82% • In need of improvement • MCCVLC Study – 6 responses, 24% • ITC Study – 4%
Course Development • More colleges using a team development model • 10 colleges use extensively/9 colleges use sometime • Master/template courses • 7 colleges employ master templates for all courses/8 colleges use them sometimes • Average length of time to develop online cours • 3 – 6 months – 55% of colleges • 1 – 3 months – 29% of colleges • 6 – 9 months – 8% of colleges • 9 – 12 months – 8% of colleges • Average # of courses developed last year – 17 • One college developed 160!
Greatest Challenges • Other Challenges • Maintaining/Achieving Quality • Faculty – Contracts, Training • Lack of vision by upper administration • Decentralized situation = Responsibility and no authority • Lack of commitment from other departments • Public Policy Issues • Future federal regulations – state authorization • HLC
Faculty • Teaching Ratios for online course • Full time average – 68% ( for 2012 - 63%) • Nationally – 57% • Part time average – 34% (for 2012 - 37%) • Nationally – 43% • Everyone continues to have a hard time finding qualified faculty • Limiting number of classes taught • 40% do not limit (for 2012 - 48%)
Faculty • Limit the number of courses taught as a full load
Faculty • Interaction with students requirement
Faculty • Mandatory training to teach online Nationally, nearly 60% require 6 or more hours of training In 2012 – 59% reported mandatory training to teach online
Faculty • Re-certification for seasoned online faculty
Library Services • Librarian assigned to serve distance learning courses
Library Services • Institution follows ACRL (Association of College & Research Libraries) Standards for Distance Learning Library Services
2014 MCCVLC Distance Learning Administrators Survey Results & Discussion