Sloan-C View
Perspectives in Quality Online Education
Volume 7 Issue 1 - January 2008
ISSN 1541-2806
Dedicated to the Highest Standards in Online Education

Issue Contents


Sloan-C International Symposium on Emerging Technology Applications for Online Learning- Register Today

Join Sloan-C for our first West Coast conference. The Sloan-C International Symposium on Emerging Technology Applications for Online Learning is designed to bring together individuals interested in the technological aspects of online learning. Experts, intermediate users and novices are welcome to participate in Symposium activities that will include face-to-face and virtual components.

Symposium tracks highlight and demonstrate research, application and best practices of important emerging technological tools related to social networking, assessment, open educational resources, new media and support services. Presentations will be provided in both the face-to-face event and the virtual event held in Second Life and the Moodle Learning Management System.

When: May 7 - 9, 2008
Cost: $470 (10% discount for Premium or College Pass members)

Take an additional 10% off if you register before January 15th.

Register here.

CFP deadline is January 15th.


Teaching and Learning: What does Technology Have to Do with It?

Ray Schroeder
Director, Office of Technology-Enhanced Learning
Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois at Springfield

When most people think about teaching and learning, they conjure up images of classroom engagement between student and faculty member using a black or white board; reading books; taking notes on paper; and typing papers. Each of these images involves technologies: blackboards; whiteboards; books; pen and paper; typewriter or computer. Technology tools have always been a part of the teaching and learning process. From pre-history to today, they are integral to the way in which humans store information and help to build knowledge.

From drawings on cave walls to cuneiform tablets, the leaps in technology afforded significant benefits. Cavemen (and women) drew and scratched on cave walls, in part to illustrate concepts and techniques. Those cave walls were not "mobile" technologies. As civilization evolved, "mobile-learning" technologies came about. I can only suppose that the clay cuneiform tablets dating back six millennia were used by Sumerians to teach and learn. But, those tablets certainly must have been awkward, heavy, and required time for the clay to dry (or be fired for a more permanent record). Over time, the clay cuneiform tablets were replaced by the equivalent of the iPod - the new technology of papyrus, which was much lighter and on which the ink dried instantly. Later, there were erasable wax tablets followed by a continuous stream of ever-evolving, ever-improving technologies.

Imagine the burden on the teachers of shifting from clay to papyrus; from papyrus to wax. A busy teacher would hardly have the time to learn how to best use the new technology and what advantages it afforded to students. Becoming facile with the stylus was hard enough, but then having to learn to use a pen was just over the top! And, building the infrastructure to supply the ink and replacement pens, let alone sheaves of papyrus must have seemed insurmountable!

From the very beginnings of civilization, technology has had a central communication role in facilitating information transfer and knowledge-building. Certainly, this is no more true than today. We are confronted with an accelerating array of new technologies. Many of these provide significant enhancements to information exchange, retention of data, and the building of knowledge. And, the same is true with the new technologies of today.

The challenge remains in finding ways to most efficiently teach technology to the teachers so that they can best use these new technologies to do their work better. Just as we teach our students in groups - thereby drawing upon the collective wisdom and the range of questions of the diverse group of learners - there are advantages to teach the teachers in groups. The diversity of the group can create a fertile ground to grow broader and deeper understandings of how the technologies might best be used. That is the principle underlying our approach to Sloan-C workshops. Learning together, we will build greater knowledge and support networks as we move beyond the cuneiform to Web 2.0.

(Join Sloan-C in our online workshop- Technology Bootcamp - February 6 to March 7. Burks Oakley II and Ray Schroeder of the University of Illinois and John Bourne of Sloan-C will host.)


2008 Premium Membership & College Pass- Renewal

Happy New Year! Has your institution renewed their membership yet? January workshops have already started, so don't delay.

Institutional Premium Membership: $945

Renew your Premium Membership today.

College Pass: $3,495

Renew your College Pass today.


The Sloan-C Teaching Certificate Program

The first session begins January 16, 2008!

The market for online education has grown exponentially. As detailed in Online Nation: Five Years of Growth in Online Learning (the fifth annual report on the state of online learning in U.S. higher education, based on responses from over 2,500 colleges and universities) nearly 3.5 million students were taking at least one online course during the fall 2006 term, a nearly 10% increase over the number reported in the previous year. To accommodate this growth, a need exists for trained higher educational professionals to develop and facilitate online programs of study.

The Sloan-C Online Teaching Certificate program proves unique in that faculty can take key lessons from the Getting Started and Quality Matters workshops, immediately apply these learnings in a laboratory environment, and receive feedback from both the faculty mentors and faculty peers. The first session of this year begins January 16.

Key criteria:
-Designed to build or enhance educators' professional knowledge, skills, and leadership in distance/online education and training.
-Designed as flexible, learner-centered offerings, SLOAN-C educational initiatives integrate core knowledge and theory with practical, experiential-based exercises, case studies, and discussions.
-Educational initiatives are presented via the Internet, web conferencing, with supplemental print and multi-media formats so travel is not required.
-Participants may enroll in workshops on a certificate or non-certificate basis.

Learning outcomes:
-Develop skills in distance education and online learning.
-Expand current knowledge and apply new ideas in practice.
-Provide grounding in the pedagogy of online teaching and learning.
-Prepare participants to facilitate online, built upon Sloan-C's effective practices, from whatever current teaching or training materials used.
-Gain hands-on experience as a distance learner.

Possible career outcomes:
-Prepare for a distance education position.
-Enhance career opportunities within your own organization or externally.

Please visit the Sloan-C Certificate webpage for more information or email R.T. Brown, rtbrown@sloan-c.org

NOTE: Does your institution have a College Pass? Institutions with college passes only pay the certification fee and use their pre-paid seats towards the 5 required workshops.


Evolving Student Services

Naj Shaik, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
Karen Vignare, Michigan State University

Education is a service, and students are the prime focus of the institution. Education services constitute core and supporting services. Teaching and learning that occur in the class are examples of core services because they are critical to a successful learning experience. A number of supporting services include real-time information about courses, student advising, online registration, orientation, student accounts, help-desk, complaint handling, and feedback in a friendly, trustworthy and timely manner. Students regularly come into contact with staff associated with these services during their stay at the institution. These services create added value for student and determine the quality of their learning experience.

According to the recent Sloan survey of online education, Online Nation: Five Years of Growth in Online Learning, there has been a substantial growth in online learning and that the demand is expected to continue. In the past, educational institutions have addressed the issue of student support services by establishing and maintaining facilities and personnel integrated into the campus environment. The focus has been mostly campus-based students. With the growing enrollment of distance learning student community on the campuses there has been a gradual evolution of student services to meet the needs of online distance learners. Many academic institutions started with extending the campus-based student services to online distance learners by implementing Student Relationship Management (SRM) to provide services to improve student relationships.

Even though enrollments in online and distance learning programs have been growing at a relatively faster rate than campus programs, and they are expected to continue growing, few academic institutions offer services to non-traditional students that are on par with campus-based student services.

Institutions market themselves as student focused, but in reality most SRMs are designed to focus on products rather than on students. Institutions need to better engage students with collaborative learning experiences, empowering students and making them feel they are an integral component of the value-creation process. The merging of Web 2.0 technologies with SOA (service-oriented architecture) provides opportunities to develop faster, cheaper and more flexible student centered services to meet the needs of all students. One of the strategies available to the institution is to leverage the social dimension of Web 2.0, harnessing the collective power of students to custom design services using technologies such as blogs to syndicate their posts, wikis as collaboration tools, and mashups to assemble Web components and data.

(Join Sloan-C in our online workshop- Support Services and Emerging Technologies - January 9 to 18th. Naj Shaik, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Karen Vignare, Michigan State University will host.)


The Strategic Case for Online Learning: Access, Engagement and Success

What: NATIONAL WEBCAST DISCUSSION
When: Wednesday, February 27, 2008
Time: 1:00 - 2:30 p.m. eastern time
The Partners: The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation; The American Distance Education Consortium (ADEC); The National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges (NASULGC); Sloan-C and cooperating universities

THE STRATEGIC CASE FOR ONLINE LEARNING: ACCESS, ENGAGEMENT AND SUCCESS

Beginning in 2007 the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation made possible a national initiative focused on the strategic importance of online learning and distance education in higher education. This live national videoconference coming from Washington State University is an opportunity for individuals (at their computers) and in groups participating locally together to:

-interact with university presidents and other national leaders involved in the NASULGC/SLOAN National Online Learning Commission;

-experience real case examples from universities where online learning, distance education and rapid internet interaction made a difference (time to graduation, business and financial strength, disaster recovery, mentoring etc.);

- see how some universities are incorporating this strategic asset in their master plans;

-discuss and raise questions about what works, what doesn't and what leadership in this area requires for the future.

A website will be established prior to the program including all program and access details. Opportunites for pre-conference interaction, local group discussion formation and online learning resources will be made available shortly.

The American Distance Education Consortium (ADEC) is collaborating with Washington State University and Oregon State University in producing the event. the NASULGC Commission, Sloan-C,The University of Nebraska-Lincoln, The Pennsylvania State University, Purdue University, Colorado State University, the Southern Educational Regional Education Board (SREB)and others are participating in marketing,case study development and program planning.

Target Audience: Presidents, Chancellors, Provosts, Vice-Presidents and Deans for Engagement and Distance Education, Program Directors, Faculty and Learners interested in developing quality online learning programs with breadth and scale.

Ultimate Goal: Access to quality, affordable higher education to all wishing to learn.


Learn From the Experts - The Sloan-C 2008 Workshop Series

The 2008 schedule has been posted on the main workshop page.

Support Services and Emerging Technologies - January 9 - 18

A student's online academic journey can be complex, but should it? When designed properly, emerging technologies can assist both institutions and students. What does an institution need to support online learning endeavors? Lets explore creative applications of technology for: -Staff and faculty development and training -Library considerations -Academic and student support services -Open source utilization and partnerships -Peer learning, and -Self-learning paradigms.

Click here for details and registration.

Assessment Advances Using Emerging Technologies - January 16 - 25

Whats my grade? How am I doing? Performance evaluation throughout the learning path of a student in an online environment is evolving. How are new technologies and applications helping us understand assessment? Lets examine emerging technologies that assist with assessment that will enable us to better serve our anytime, anywhere lifestyles. Concepts included will be: student learning and programmatic effectiveness.

Click here for details and registration.

Getting Started: Online Course Development Basics - January 16 - February 8

A student's online academic journey can be complex, but should it? When designed properly, emerging technologies can assist both institutions and students. What does an institution need to support online learning endeavors? Lets explore creative applications of technology for: -Staff and faculty development and training -Library considerations -Academic and student support services -Open source utilization and partnerships -Peer learning, and -Self-learning paradigms.

Click here for details and registration.

Pedagogy And New Learning Environments - January 30 - February 8

Teaching and learning has vastly changed due to emerging technologies. Personalization, collaborative learning, and social software have produced and introduced perhaps a new paradigm. Can instructional designers keep up? How? We'll explore what has been done to improve pedagogy using these new tools. Other considerations include: open educational resources, collaborative efforts, design paradigms, and affordable, sustainable delivery models.

Click here for details and registration.


Sloan-C Quick Links

Membership - Join Sloan-C and enjoy added savings and access

Workshops - Tailored for faculty and administrators

Journal of Asynchronous Learning Networks (JALN) - The leading journal for online education

Survey Reports - Latest findings from our research

Publications - The state-of-the-art in online learning

Effective Practices - Learn what works best from the best

JobLine - Your next career step in higher education

College Pass - Dramatic group savings at Sloan-C workshops

Vendor Corner - Find the professional help to keep your online programs moving forward

Sloan-C Catalog - Listing of Sloan-C member online courses

Sloan-C Wiki - Meet colleagues to exchange ideas and questions

 

Featured Download

Asynchronous Learning Networks: A Sloan Foundation Perspective

In the first issue of JALN in March 1997, Frank Mayadas wrote that today's low-cost communications and computer technologies enable learning in Asynchronous Learning Networks (ALNs), in the process simultaneously overcoming barriers of isolation, distance and those imposed by rigid time constraints.

Please download your free copy here.

 

Upcoming Sloan-C Workshops

2008 Workshops

January:

February:

 

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The Sloan Consortium (Sloan-C), sponsored by the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, is composed of institutions and organizations dedicated to continually improving the quality, scale, and breadth of their online programs, according to their own distinctive missions, so that education becomes a part of everyday life, accessible and affordable for anyone, anywhere, at any time, in a wide variety of disciplines.

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