Title: Sandra K. Woodley Funding Educational Technology
1Sandra K. WoodleyFunding Educational Technology
SHEEO Professional Development ConferenceAugust
11-14, 2004
2Best of Intentions
- Increasing Access
- Cost Assumptions Cost Drivers
- Flexible Instruction Institutions
- Kentucky Thinking
3 4Instruction on the Internet
Virtual College University Consortia A
National Study Epper and Garn (2003)
5Growth of Virtual Universities
Virtual College University Consortia A
National Study Epper and Garn (2003)
6Assumption
Convenience in education is like location in
real estate
Graves, 2001
7any-Time any-Place any-Pace any-Path any-Person
8Conclusions on Access
- Access is expected
- Accessibility is required
- Service is Convenience
- New capabilities must be developed
9Assumptions of Cost
- Online learning is less expensive than classroom
learning. - Online learning is more expensive than classroom
learning.
10Both are right!
Online learning is more expensive
Mediated
Cost
Classroom
Number of Students
Online learning is less expensive
Jewett model, WCET, 2003
11Cost Drivers
- Faculty compensation
- Faculty workload
- Overhead
- Enrollment/Credit Hours
- Office Space
- Development (Personnel)
- Development (OTPS)
- Classroom space
- Computing equipment software
Milam, Comparing Costs
12Slow Drivers
- Overhead
- Classroom space
- Office space
13Change Changes Drivers
Computing equipment software Increasing
faculty student use of eLearning
Gartner, 2003
14Drivers of Innovation
15Effective Development
- Program Grants
- Release Time (courses)
- Program Loans
- Funding Consistency
- Peer Review
16New Development Models
- Shared Courses
- Sharable Content
- Content Cartridges
- Instructional Packages
- Add-on Services
17Efficient Delivery
- Size matters.
- There is a benefit to offering online courses in
divisions that already generate extensive course
sections, (Milam). - Teaching more students requires more faculty.
- Full-time faculty ensure quality and increase
cost. (Milam) - Maintenance Kills.
18Improving Learning and Reducing Costs New
Models for Online Learning
- Large enrollment, introductory courses
- 30 institutions nationwide (Research,
Comprehensive Universities, Private Colleges,
Community Colleges) - Over 50,000 students annually
- Significant Learning 20 of 30 showed increased
learning, 10 showed no significant difference - Significant Savings over 3.6 million dollars
in one year, average 40 measured in
cost-per-student
Twigg, 2003
19New Models
K-12
Lower Division
Upper Division
20K-CORE
Phase One
- Develop common course objectives and
competencies. - Define a single, common course content and
pedagogical structure. - Utilize Instructional Tutors.
- Use full-time faculty to ensure the integrity of
the curriculum.
21K-CORE
Phase X
- Multi-sector tuition rates
- Open-entry/Open-exit registration
- Competency-based completion
- Other dangerous notions.
22Conclusions on Cost
- We want distance education technology to reduce
the cost (not the quality) of instructional
delivery. - Technology makes implicit costs explicit.
- Optimization of current models, while necessary,
will not yield needed cost-reducing efficiency. - Rigorous design and implementation of new models
will be required to realize cost savings earlier
in the cost model.
23Sizzle, Fizzle or Drizzle?
24KYVU Goals (1999)
- Enhance and expand educational access and
increase educational attainment across Kentucky. - Upgrade workforce skills and expand professional
development through basic and continuing
education. - Increase collaboration and foster efficiency and
effectiveness in delivering courses and programs.
- Enhance educational quality.
- Increase global competitiveness of Kentuckys
educational resources.
25Kentucky Capability
Kentuckys Postsecondary Distance Education
Community
26Expectations Emphasis
Survey of Kentucky Chief Academic Officers May
2003
27(No Transcript)
28DLAC Goals (2004)
- Develop the POLICIES AND RELATIONSHIPS which
fully utilize statewide institutional and agency
resources. - Encourage and effectively support COLLABORATION
and COORDINATION of distance education across the
Commonwealth. - Ensure that Kentuckys teachers, faculty and
learners have MEANINGFUL ACCESS AND SUPPORT which
enables success in learning and teaching across a
multi-level, multi-course, multi-institution,
multi-agency, multi-site system of distance
education. - Support the identification, development and
delivery of HIGH QUALITY distance education
programs.
29Changing Goals
KYVU Goals (1999)
DLAC Goals (2004)
Increase global competitiveness of Kentuckys educational resources. Develop the POLICIES AND RELATIONSHIPS which fully utilize statewide institutional and agency resources.
Increase collaboration and foster efficiency and effectiveness in delivering courses and programs. Encourage and effectively support COLLABORATION and COORDINATION of distance education across the Commonwealth.
Upgrade workforce skills and expand professional development through basic and continuing education. Enhance and expand educational access and increase educational attainment across Kentucky. Ensure that Kentuckys teachers, faculty and learners have MEANINGFUL ACCESS AND SUPPORT which enables success in learning and teaching across a multi-level, multi-course, multi-institution, multi-agency, multi-site system of distance education.
Enhance educational quality. Support the identification, development and delivery of HIGH QUALITY distance education programs.
30Kentucky Observations
- Increasing access requires increasing capability
and capacity. - Optimizing traditional models increases
capability not capacity. - New capacity-building models that reduce the cost
of instructional development and delivery need to
be tested and expanded. - Transformation initiatives require driving
leadership.