Title: Blended Learning and the Generations
1Blended Learning andthe Generations
- Chuck Dziuban
- Joel Hartman
- Patsy Moskal
University of Central Florida
2Some characteristics ofthe generations
- Matures (prior to 1946)
- Dedicated to a job they take on
- Respectful of authority
- Place duty before pleasure
- Baby boomers (1946-1964)
- Live to work
- Generally optimistic
- Influence on policy products
- Generation X (1965-1980)
- Work to live
- Clear consistent expectations
- Value contributing to the whole
- Millennials (1981-1994)
- Live in the moment
- Expect immediacy of technology
- Earn money for immediate consumption
3Technology is anything inventedafter you were
born
Alan Kay
4Millennials and Technology
- Millennials are the first generation to grow up
in a digital world - The PC Window-based OS
- The Internet World Wide Web
- The CD
- Millennials have access to technology that is
personal, portable, powerful, multifunction,
multimedia, and affordable - Millennials attitudes and behaviors have been
shaped by technology to an extent far greater
than previous generations
5Millennials todays learners
- Diverse
- Mobile
- Always connected
- Experiential
- Multitasking
- Community-oriented
- Digitally literate
6Media literacy
By age 21, todays college studentswill have
spent
- 10,000 hours playing video games
- Sent/received 200,000 E-mails
- 20,000 hours watching TV
- 10,000 hours on a cell phone
- Under 5,000 hours reading
Prensky, 2003
7Games are a way of life
- 69 have played games since elementary school
- 77 have played games by high school
- 100 have experienced games by college
- 60 of college students are regular players
- Games are part of Millennials multitasking
environment, and are integrated into daily
life(and studying)
--Jones, 2003
8College Internet use
- 79 Internet has a positive impact on
academic experience - 73 Use the Internet more than the library for
research - 72 Check E-mail every day
- 60 Internet has improved relationships with
classmates (56 professors) - 46 Can express ideas they would not have
expressed in class
Jones, 2002
9Internet a social technology
- Millennials use the Internet primarily as a
social technology - They use the Internet to maintain multiple lines
of communication - IM for quick communication
- E-mail or phone for longer communication
- Home computer is a repository of important
information other devices (laptop, PDA)
transport the material
--Lextant, 2003
10Rising expectations
- The rising expectations of technology-literate
students are difficult to meet - Service expectations
- Amazon.com and Google are their models
- They expect self-service,immediacy, and the
abilityto customize - Engaging learning experiences
- Satisfaction levels decreasingwith each
successive generation
11Millennials the up side
- Goal oriented
- Positive attitudes
- Collaborative style
- Multitasking
- Technologically savvy
- Learn by tinkering
?Raines, 2002
12Millennials the down side
- Weak critical thinking skills
- Naïve beliefs regarding intellectual property and
the authenticity of information found on the
Internet - Question everything
- High expectation levels / low satisfaction levels
- Technology preferences have no institutional
context (IM, wikis, blogs, social networking
sites)
Prensky, 2003
13The freshman mindset
- Computers have always fit in their backpacks
- Photos have always been processed in an hour
- They have always had a PIN
- Paul Newman has always made salad dressing
- Bert and Ernie are old enough to be their parents
- Gas has always been unleaded
- Oliver North has always been a talk show host
--Beloit College, 2003 2004
14UCFs top down and bottom up approach
15The generations inblended courses
(N18,732)
16Students very satisfied with blended learning by
generation
(N491)
17Changed approach to learningby generation
(N491)
18Web definitely madeinteraction easier
(N491)
19Students positive perceptions about blended
learning
- Convenience
- Reduced logistic demands
- Increased learning flexibility
- Technology-enhanced learning
Reduced Opportunity Costs for Education
20Students less positive perceptions about blended
learning
- Reduced face-to-face time
- Technology problems
- Reduced instructor assistance
- Increased workload
Increased Opportunity Costs for Education
21College Level Academic Skills Tests (CLAST)
English scores
N 16,293
22College Level Academic Skills Tests (CLAST) Math
scores
N 15,812
23Upper undergraduatesuccess rate
n447
n2,172
n4,330
24Upper undergraduatewithdrawal rate
n2,250
n4,530
n465
25What is blended learning?
- Working definition from the Sloan-C Blended
Learning Workshop - A course or program that combines online
learning and face-to-face instruction in a manner
that reduces the number of face-to-face classroom
meetings.
26What to call it?
- Blended? Hybrid? Mixed-mode?
- What you call it is not important
- Ensuring everyone on your campus knows what your
chosen term means is - To the more experienced institutions, blending
represents the optimization of pedagogical
approaches, rather than a time division between
online and F2F
27What does it mean to institutions?
- Improve teaching and learning (e.g., implement
learner-centered pedagogies) - Move from an ad-hoc bottom up approach to an
institutional initiative - Increase flexibility and convenience for students
- Increase efficiency of classroom utilization
(e.g., manage growth, reduce costs)
28What does it mean to faculty?
- A safe way to explore online learning
- More work, but likely worth it in terms of
improved student engagement and achievement - A way to meet student expectations
- Possibly the best of both worlds
29What does it mean to students?
- Blended learning is inwardly directed and can
potentially impact all of the institutions
students - For Millennials, blended learning represents an
attractive alternative to F2F instruction - Blended learning is a good match for Millennials
visual, exploratory, social learning preferences - Millennials expect everything to be online
- Older generations may not perceive blended
learning the same way as Millennials
30Institutional Impacts
- Organizational structures
- Student academic support services
- Policies
- Scalability of business processes and
infrastructure - Faculty development
- Assessment
- Classroom multimedia and network access
- Funding
31Critical success factors
- Clear sense of institutional purpose and expected
outcomes - Pro-active policy formation
- Faculty engagement and development
- Learner support
- Coordinated involvement of campus service
providers - Online support services
- Assessment for continuous improvement
- Modified institutional processes (e.g., classroom
scheduling)
32Contacts
- Dr. Chuck Dziuban
- (407) 823-5478
- dziuban_at_mail.ucf.edu
- Dr. Joel L. Hartman
- (407) 823-6778
- joel_at_mail.ucf.edu
- Dr. Patsy Moskal
- (407) 823-0283
- pdmoskal_at_mail.ucf.edu
- http//pegasus.cc.ucf.edu/rite
33DISCUSSION