Title: Integrating Online Learning Research into the University Research Culture
1Integrating Online Learning Research into the
University Research Culture
Dawn Howard-Rose
2THE VISION
- Traditional University Research Culture
3Overview
- TRENDS IN HIGHER EDUCATION that will help make
this vision a reality - CHALLENGES to be overcome
- THE GOOD NEWS Evidence of change
- EXAMPLES of how and where this evolution is
beginning to occur.
4TREND 1 E-LEARNING IN UNIVERSITIES
- Traditional teaching and learning models
- face-to-face
- place-based
- teacher-centred
- mainly lecture
- knowledge is imparted by experts to novices
- Teaching and Learning with technologies
- online, e-learning
- distributed and distance learning
- learner-centred
- interactive
- collaborative
5TREND 2 TOWARD A SCHOLARSHIP OF TEACHING AND
LEARNING IN HIGHER EDUCATION
- Teaching as
- secondary to and interfering with basic research
- private, isolated
- personal
- depends on professors special expertise
- Teaching as
- focus of inquiry
- problem-based and systematic
- grounded in theory
- public, peer-reviewed
- replicable, resulting in principles of best
practice
6A SCHOLARSHIP OF TEACHING CREATES
- Perception and reality of teaching and learning
as collaborative - Community of practice among faculty
researchers/teachers - Common purpose that of learning
- Collaboration between faculty and students and
among students - Potential for involvement of students in faculty
research
7THE MERGING OF THESE 2 TRENDS
- Institutions are beginning to embrace learning
technologies - Faculty now are experimenting
- Many faculty joining scholarship of teaching
communities of practice
- Increasing interest by faculty in traditional
disciplines in - How students learn
- How to facilitate learning
- How other faculty do so
- Pedagogy of teaching through technology
8CHALLENGES TO BE OVERCOME
- Many still question the value of distance and
learning - Scholarship of teaching in the disciplines still
remains mostly a labour of love - Faculty often resist change
- Putting their teaching practice under scrutiny
theirs and their peers - Giving over power to students
9THE GOOD NEWS EVIDENCE OF CHANGE
- Institutions are seeing the need and benefits of
making the shifts - E-learning increases access
- Economy needs and demands that access, so
workforce can upgrade without career interruption - Universities and colleges are competing for their
share of the market - Need for more research faculty as many retire
-
.. more
10EVIDENCE OF CHANGE Contd
- Online technologies also support research
training through - Research collaboration among geographically
diverse faculty - Participation in these projects by graduate
students and junior faculty - . more
11EVIDENCE OF CHANGE Contd
- Institutional collaboration is seen as
cost-saving and logical - Ed. Tech resources are maximized when shared
- Duplication of effort is reduced
- Draws on expertise, such as content knowledge,
available at other institutions - Better access and service for students who want
to take courses from several institutions
12SCHOLARSHIP OF TEACHING IS CATCHING ON
- Teaching effectiveness is increasingly valued in
reward system - More research and development funds for faculty
to experiment with new technologies for learning
and teaching - Other issues of technology in academe, such as
moving toward online journals, promotes ideas and
mechanisms for peer review
13EXAMPLES OF HOW THE VISION IS BECOMING REALITY
- Collaboration and partnerships
- Research on university teaching
- Facilitating development of communities of
teaching practice within the disciplines - Enhancing the value and recognition of the
scholarship of teaching
14COHERE Collaboration for Online Higher Education
Research
- PURPOSE collaboration to plan online courses
programsshare faculty development research
evaluate - CHALLENGES shared values and culture... latent
curriculum - INSTITUTIONAL PARTNERS
- Alberta
- Calgary
- Dalhousie
- Guelph
- Saskatchewan
- Simon Fraser
- Waterloo
- York
15COHERE Canadian Studies Program Initiative
- Six COHERE partner institutions have signed an
MOU - Will collaborate and co-develop an online
Canadian Studies program - Will represent the first signature COHERE
course/program offerings
16COHERE SignaturesA common philosophy of
learning reflected in instructional features of
our courses
- Inquiry based learning
- Critical reflection
- Exploring new knowledge
17COHERE Canadian Studies Program Partners
- Simon Fraser University
- University of Saskatchewan
- University of Waterloo
- University of Guelph
- York University
- Dalhousie University
18SSHRC Initiative on the New Economy
- SSHRC - Social Sciences and Humanities Research
Council - 100M over 5 years, 1st call in Fall 2001
- Emphasis on management, education and lifelong
learning research - Major programs for
- Collaborative Research Initiatives 1M/ann.
- Research Alliances 300K/ann.
- 30K development to short-listed proposals
19WorkplaceONE
- enhancing the impacts integration of online
education in the workplace
- Activities
- design methodology to assess workplace impacts
- research impacts of existing programs
- develop flexible partnerships (in-kind and
contributions?) - open possibility of future Network of Centres of
Excellence
20Impacts of Distributed Learning Programs for
Management
- Programs
- Farm Business Management certificate Sask -
hybrid - Management of Technology masters degree UW -
online - Diploma in Leadership Guelph - online
- Leadership Development for Federal Employees
CCMD - mixed - Financial Management Course Canadian Securities
Institute - online - MBA in Financial Industry Dal - distributed
21Impacts of Distributed Learning Programs for
Management
- Research questions in progress
- impacts on students work, colleagues workplace
- impacts on students careers lifelong learning
- Methods Quantitative and Qualitative
- Prototype Cases to develop methods and initial
baseline data - Longitudinal data, case studies involving
qualitative and quantitative methods - Interviews, questionnaires, analysis of online
discussion and web sites, job shadowing
22Prototype Case Studies
- PROTOTYPE CASE 1
- Diverse Workplace Settings
- PROTOTYPE CASE 2
- Singular Workplace Setting
23Timeline Overview
design pilot methodology in prototype cases
Year 1
continue longitudinal study of prototype cases,
design complement cases
Year 2
adapt programs
more study
Year 3
24Partnerships for Learning, Innovation and
Technology PLIANT
- Learning Technology Faculty Institutes
- Collaboration to link faculty experts in selected
disciplines involved in e-learning product
development and implementation - Collaborative Graduate Classes
- Linking small enrollment graduate classes to
capitalize on faculty expertise
25Common to both PLIANT Components
- Use of broadband technology to link faculty and
grad students with audio, video and application
sharing - Facilitating development of communities of
learners and e-learning developers
26Co-Operative Learning Object Exchange CLOE
- Partner within Merlot Consortium
- Learning object repository to facilitate re-use
- Collaboration on learning object development
- Moving toward quality assurance through triage
process and evaluation of learning impacts - Developing a peer-review process
27CONCLUSION
- A vision for the integration of e-learning
research into the mainstream research culture of
universities - Challenges to making these a reality
- Why and how these challenges are being overcome
- Some illustrative examples of the realization of
this vision