Title: Untitled
1Oakleys Thoughts about Quality Online Teaching
and Learning
Burks Oakley II Associate Vice President for
Academic Affairs Director, University of Illinois
Online Professor University of Illinois 24 March
2006
2Pew Internet American Life
- The Pew Internet American Life Project (PIP)
produces reports that explore the impact of the
Internet on families, communities, work and home,
daily life, education, health care, and civic and
political life.
http//www.pewinternet.org/
3Interesting data from the PIP
- Two-thirds of the American public go online
regularly - 81 of the 18-29 age group go online daily
- 88 of people with a college degree go online
regularly - 84 of Internet users look for maps and driving
directions online - 78 of Internet users research a product or
service online before buying
4A typical day in early 2006
- Based on the PIP, more than 70 million American
adults logged onto the Internet to - use e-mail
- get news
- access government information
- check out health and medical information
- participate in auctions
- book travel reservations
- gamble
- seek out romantic partners
- further their education through online classes
5Univ. of Illinois at Springfield
- Campus was founded in 1969 as Sangamon State
University (SSU) to be a regional capstone
university - Became the University of Illinois at Springfield
in 1995 - 20 bachelors degree programs 18 masters degree
programs 1 doctoral program
6Univ. of Illinois at Springfield
- UIS/SSU traditionally has served a large
population of non-traditional students (working
adults with families, older students, part-time,
commuter students) - In 2001, UIS added a lower-division Capital
Scholars program (100 students/year) - 2,857 FTE students, 4,393 head-count, 177
full-time faculty (Spring 2006)
7A vibrant campus at UIS
8A wireless campus at UIS
- UIS was the first public university in Illinois
to implement wireless networking throughout its
campus even in the soccer stadium
University Hall Opened July 2004 31
million 116,000 sq. ft.
9UIS online degree programs
- The online program was started in 1998
- Masters degrees
- Management Information Systems (98), Master in
Teacher Leadership (00), Environmental Science
(05), Computer Science (05), Public
Administration (06) - Bachelors degrees
- Liberal Studies (99), English (02), History
(03), Computer Science (03), Math (04),
Philosophy (04), Math Education (Fall 04),
Economics (06), Business Administration (06)
10Online learning at UIS
UIS Credit Hours Taught Fall Semester
On-Campus excludes CapScholars
11UIS online enrollments
12Penetration of online learning
- In the Spring 2006 semester at UIS
- 40 of the students took at least one online
course - 24 of the students took online courses
exclusively - 28 of all course credits were generated by
online courses - Online majors made up 18 of UIS headcount
enrollment - The online course enrollments (numbering 3010)
were 25 greater than they were during the Spring
2005 semester
13Transformation for online
- What has the UIS campus done to transform itself
to serve so many new online students?
14New online initiative at UIS
- 1.21 million grant from the Alfred P. Sloan
Foundation (March 2004) - Specific goals for 3-year project
- Develop 8 new online degrees
- Triple the online enrollments
- Eventually have all on-campus degrees available
in an online format or at least all degrees that
departments want to put online the mirror
campus concept
15OTEL support
- Faculty are supported by the Office of
Technology-Enhanced Learning (OTEL)
instructional designers, web developers, graduate
assistants, hands-on training, brown-bag
seminars, etc. - Prof. Ray Schroeder, the Director of OTEL, was
the 2002 recipient of the Sloan-C award for Most
Outstanding Achievement in ALN by an Individual
16Integrating online teaching
- Academic Technology Committee (ATC) a Senate
Committee - Faculty chair, Director of OTEL, Dean of LAS,
Dean of Library, Vice Chancellor for Student
Affairs, CIO, chief advisor in LAS online office,
several online faculty, several online students - Committee charge is to deal with all issues
related to online programming, in order to
continually increase quality and student
faculty satisfaction
17e-tuition
- In the Fall 2003 term, UIS implemented an
e-tuition policy - All Illinois residents automatically qualify for
the e-tuition rate - Out-of-state students who are enrolled in an
online degree program and are taking only online
classes also qualify - The e-tuition rate is 131.75 per credit hour
(continuing undergraduate) and 152.75 per credit
hour (graduate)
18A small regional campus
- Due to e-tuition, UIS is now attracting a
national (and international) audience - 26.4 of the online enrollments are now from
out-of-state - For the Spring 2006 semester, UIS has online
students living in 45 states, Washington DC, and
Guam. Online students also are enrolled from
Austria, Canada, Chile, France, Germany, India,
Japan, Norway, and Vanuata.
19Online is part of the mainstream
- At UIS, online courses are taught by the same
faculty who teach on-campus courses - Online teaching is done on-load it is part of a
faculty members regular teaching assignment - Online degree programs are managed by the
departments, not by a separate continuing
education unit
20Faculty-driven process
- Online degree programs at UIS are faculty-driven
departmental faculty first must vote to put their
degrees online - College must then approve, then the Undergraduate
or Graduate Council
21More than just online courses
- Student services are now available online
- Admissions
- Advising and counseling
- Financial aid
- Help desk
- Library resources
- Placement and career services
- Tutoring, writing center
22Retention in online courses
- Retention in online classes at UIS
- Spring 2002 96.2
- Summer 2002 94.5
- Fall 2002 94.1
- Spring 2003 94.3
- Summer 2003 94.8
- Fall 2003 93.1
- Spring 2004 94.2
- Summer 2004 95.6
- Fall 2004 90.4
- Spring 2005 91.3
- Summer 2005 93.1
- On-campus retention averaged 94 for the past 4
semesters
23Sloan-C quality framework
- Emphasis on quality and the five pillars
- Access
- Learning effectiveness
- Student satisfaction
- Faculty satisfaction
- Cost effectiveness
- Pillar editors and non-effective
effective practices
Westminster College Fulton, MO
24The pillars at UIS
25Quality
- Commitment to Quality
- Offering time/place dispersed students the same
(or higher) quality of education as on campus - Through the same college/dept. structures
- With the same faculty members
- Through the same or analogous curriculum
26Scale
- Commitment to Scale
- Identifying needs and scaling up to meet those
needs - Meeting the needs of significant numbers of
disenfranchised and marginalized learners - Providing a meaningful service that can have a
measurable impact on a profession, a geographic
region, or an identifiable group of people
27Breadth
- Commitment to Breadth
- Not merely a handful of boutique online programs
- Not catering only to a single limited audience or
discipline - Providing a meaningful range of degree or
certificate offerings - Providing access analogous to the access afforded
those who can reside on a campus
28Attracting new students
29Attracting new students
30Majors by state and county
Spring 2006 data
31Online majors by average age
Spring 2006 data
32Average credit hours
33Accreditation by HLC-NCA
- On 27 January 2006, the HLC staff recommended to
the Commission that they give blanket approval of
UIS online baccalaureate degree completion and
masters programs. - Provost Berman This is a great endorsement of
the approach we have developed, going all the way
back to the early years of the UI-Online
initiative. Special thanks to Beverly Bunch for
her wonderful job pulling together the report!!
34UIS Success factors
- Faculty ownership of courses and curriculum
- Measured enrollment growth 25-35 per year
- E-tuition attracts a national audience builds on
the University of Illinois brand name - Knowledge of the target audience experience in
teaching non-traditional adult learners - Online degree programs offered by the UIS campus
are in demand by adult learners - Office of Technology-Enhanced Learning assists
faculty develop high-quality online courses - Robust technology infrastructure
- Strong student support (advising, library, etc.)
- Crucial marketing assistance from U of I Online
- Online fee 25/credit hour, 275k Spring 2006
35UIS Lessons learned
- Overall, the online program at UIS has been
successful because it has - the right name
- the right price point
- the right support of students and faculty
- the right degrees that appeal to adult,
non-traditional students - equivalent quality to the on-campus degree
programs
36For-profit online education
- A number of for-profit institutions providing
online courses also have NCA accreditation - Univ. of Phoenix, Walden University, Jones
International University, DeVry University,
Kaplan University - These institutions provide what the adult student
wants - flexibility, convenience, reputation, regional
accreditation, customer service.
37University of Phoenix Online
- 130,000 students enrolled
- Degrees certificates
- 1 associates degree
- 21 bachelor's degrees29 master's degrees
- 6 doctoral degrees4 certificate programs
- Net income (Apollo Group)
- 2002 - 161,150,000
- 2003 - 247,010,000
- 2004 - 277,774,000
- 2005 - 444,731,000
38Stock performance
39(No Transcript)
40For-profit online providers without regional
accreditation
- The American Public University System (APUS)
accredited by the Distance Education and Training
Council (DETC) - Kennedy-Western University licensed by the
State of Wyoming - Florida Metropolitan University Online
accredited by the Accrediting Council for
Independent Colleges and Schools (ACICS) - Westwood College Online accredited by the
Accrediting Commission of Career Schools and
Colleges of Technology (ACCSCT).
41Diploma mills
- Unaccredited distance-learning institutions are
often referred to as diploma mills. - Professor George Gollin (Physics Dept., UIUC) has
publicized these institutions - His website is at http//web.hep.uiuc.edu/home/g
-gollin/pigeons/ - The diploma mills often are accredited by
accreditation mills.
42Rochville University
- Accredited by the Board of Online Universities
Accreditation (BOUA) and the Universal Council
for Online Education Accreditation (UCOEA) - http//www.rochvilleuniversity.org/
43Diploma mills
- In Oregon, the Office of Degree Authorization
provides for the protection of its citizens and
their postsecondary schools by ensuring the
quality of higher education and preserving the
integrity of an academic degree as a public
credential. - http//www.osac.state.or.us/oda/
44Selling bogus degrees online
http//www.instant-degrees.net/
45(No Transcript)
46The Internet has no borders
- The Internet has no borders. You cant regulate
the websites that people can visit. This isnt
China or Tunisia. - Certainly an out-of-state institution with no
physical presence in Illinois does NOT have to
seek IBHE approval.
47Oakleys Thoughts about Quality Online Teaching
and Learning
Burks Oakley II web http//www.online.uillinois.
edu/oakley/ e-mail oakley_at_uillinois.edu
This work is licensed under a Creative
Commons Attribution NonCommercial - ShareAlike
2.5 License.