Title: Distance Learning: Challenges and Strategies
1Distance Learning Challenges and Strategies
- Compiled by
- Besiki stvilia
2Class Administrivia
- As a class assignment please post your responses
to the following questions on the Distance
Education webboard by the Thursday of the week 9
(March 31st) - Which of the challenges identified in this week's
readings is most significant to you as a current
or future online educator, and, what are some of
the strategies you currently use or may use in
the future to meet the challenge? - Would you like to become a "virtual" professor
why and why not?
3Class Objectives and Outline
- Class objectives
- To provide an overview of the issues (problems,
benefits, challenges) surrounding distance
education over the internet from a teacher's
perspective. - To help students to reflect on their own
perspectives and experiences regarding Internet
based training and instruction. - Outline
- What is distance education
- Why it is important
- What are some of the challenges
- What are some of the successful strategies to
meet the challenges
4Definition of Distance Education
- the process of extending learning, or delivering
instructional resource-sharing opportunities, to
locations away from a classroom, building or
site, to another classroom, building or site by
using video, audio, computer, multimedia
communications, or some combination of these with
other traditional delivery methods - source Institutional Technology Council (ITC)
http//144.162.197.250/definition.htm
5NCES Survey
6Changing roles (Hiltz et al)
- From Facilitator to Moderator leading to
learning - Cognitive role
- Two way learning process
- Engaging in a deeper level of mental processing
thinking, reasoning, analyzing - Persistent communication leads to more reflective
and high quality responses accuracy becomes very
important - Affective Roles
- More nonverbal communication
- More intimacy
- More formal, less humor
- Managerial roles
- More course planning
- More course administration and organization
leading, controlling - Searching for a new persona smiley faces are
not my thing
7Kinds of interactivity
- Between student and instructor
- Among the members of the class as they engage in
discussions and collaborative work - Between the learners and the software
8Establish Swift Trust
- Structure clear contributions for each student to
make - Help them to cope with technical and task
uncertainties - Model and encourage response to each other
contributions - Early encouragement of social communications
- Members initial actions as well as their
responses to one another are critical to trust
development - The faculty member must guide this process during
the students first interactions with the class
outline
9Design collaborative learning activities
- A seminar where the students become the teachers
- Collaborative exam
- Group projects, debates,
10Generate active participation with software
- Quiz routines
- CMC technologies
11Experiences
- Frustrating experiences
- More time is required
- Typing and technological glitches
- Workload
- Fulfilling experience
- Convenience/Efficiency
- Fun and Challenge
- Communication with students
12Challenges (Schrum et al)
- Access to tools
- Different technology experience
- Give technology training
- Different learning preferences
- Provide information in multiple modalities
- Study habits and skills
- Give more flexibility in assignments require
participation - Goals and purposes
- Explicate these goals and motivations
- Lifestyle factors
- Tell students about the expectations up front
- Personal traits and characteristics
- Encourage students to express their concerns to
be able to work through any difficulties they are
encountering
13Recommendations (Schrum et al)
- Encourage students to post a short autobiography
- Interact with students on a one-to-one and
regular basis - Have students work collaboratively on their
assignments. - Establish minimum levels of participation in a
discussion - Provide readings that are up to date and
interesting but at the same time challenging. - Create some places in an online environment where
students can ask each other for help and also
create an open forum where students can ask
questions directly to a teacher. - Be flexible in terms of course topics and
procedures, - Design an online environment using a
technologically minimalist approach
14Classroom Learning vs. E-learning
Source Zhang, D., Zhao, J., Zhou, L., Nunamaker,
J. (2004). Can e-learning replace classroom
learning? CACM, 47(5), 75 79.
15Thanks!