Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

54
What We’re Learning About Online Learning Illinois Computing Educators’ Conference March 2, 2012 Today's presentation file Twitter: @jeff_hunt Jeffrey L. Hunt, Ed.D.

description

This is a presentation at the Illinois Computing Educators Conference, March 2, 2012

Transcript of Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Page 1: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

What We’re Learning About Online Learning

Illinois Computing Educators’ ConferenceMarch 2, 2012 Today's presentation file

Twitter: @jeff_hunt  Jeffrey L. Hunt, Ed.D.

Page 2: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Today’s Overview

• Definitions & Context• Promising Practices• Online Student

Demographics• Survey Results• Recommendations

Page 3: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

WHY DO WE CREATE OPPORTUNITIES FOR STUDENTS?

• Legal• Co-curricular for complete experience at school.• Address specific learning issues• Prepare student for the future

o AP Courseso School to Worko STEMo Careero 21st Centuryo Learn online

Page 4: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Participant QuestionWhat is your interest in online learning?•  I am curious; I am

here to find out more.

• We are dicussing online learning in our district.

• We are actively planning an online program.

• We have an online program.

Page 5: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Cloud ComputingPersonal Devices

Open SourceIncreasingBandwidth Digital Content

• •OER• •Online Courses• •Web 2.0• •Social Networking

FIVE TRENDS IN K12 EDUCATION

Page 6: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Definitions

• iNACOL – International Association for K-12 Online Learning

• OER – Open Educational Resources (Free or inexpensive course content.)

Page 7: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Definitions

http://www.sloanconsortium.org/

Page 8: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Blended Learning

• Traditional brick and mortar mixed with online learning.

• Teachers work with student individually during computer-based instruction times.

Carpe Diem H.S., Yuma, AZ

Page 9: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Online Learning• Students work at the

time of their choice.• May work at home or

at school• Have contact

electronically with teacher and other students.

• May have pacing charts to evenly divide work.

• May have weekly deadlines.

Florida Virtual School

Page 10: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Numbers:  Online Enrollments

• 2012, 3-5 million (est.) online class enrollments in K-12.

 • Nearly 1/3 of all students in

higher education took courses in fall 2010.

 • 2011 - online and blended

learning opportunities exist for at least some students in all 50 states plus DC.

http://www.inacol.org

Page 11: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

ESTIMATE OF ADOPTION

• If rate of adoption follows the classic disruptive innovation model, by 2018, 50% of all high school courses will be online.

--Clayton M. Christensen

Page 12: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 13: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 14: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

DEVELOPMENT ISSUES

• Common Core• NCAA approval• Technical know how

Page 15: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

COURSE DEVELOPMENT PHILOSOPHY

• Borrow (steal) it• Buy it• Build it yourself

Page 16: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

CONTENT

OER

• NROC• CK12

image source

Page 17: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

CONTENT

Phil Lacey’s OER Page

http://bit.ly/lacey_oer

Page 18: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Quality Assurance

Quality Course Design

Page 19: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Quality Assurance

• Effective program evaluation

• Participation targets• Completion goals• Cost targets• Student feedback• Comparison to

traditional courses/subjects

Page 20: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Delivering an Engaging and Challenging Course.

Image Credit

Page 21: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Using the same course outlines, major assessments and courses examinations as face-to-face courses.

Image Credit

Page 22: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

Provide students multiple pathways to learn:• Text• Audio• Video

Page 23: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Proctoring major assessments and final exams.

Image Credit

Page 24: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Using live virtual sessions with software like Blackboard Collaborate or Abobe Connect.

Image Credit

Page 25: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Requiring students have interactivity with the teacher and other students.

Image Credit

Page 26: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Requiring weekly, purposeful communication between the teacher and individual students.

Image Credit

Page 27: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Adding oral exams at milestone points in the course to check for understanding.

Image Credit

Page 28: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Challenging problems for accelerated (gifted) students.

Image Credit

Page 29: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

PROMISING PRACTICES

• Regular formative assessments, followed by periodic formal evaluations by outside reviewers.

Page 30: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

INTERACTION TRIANGLE

Student

Teacher

StudentContent

• •Essential Understandings• •Course Goals• •Student insights

Page 31: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

WHO CAN BE SUCCESSFUL?• Achievement and Self-Esteem•  BeliefsResponsibility/Risk Taking•  Technology Skills and Access • Organization and Self-Regulation 

 Roblyer, M.D. and Marshall, J. (2002). Prediction success of virtual high school students: Preliminary results from an educational success prediction instrument.

Page 32: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

COURSE TARGET AUDIENCES

Excellent Students, “A”, “B”

Average Students, “C”

Struggling StudentsCredit Recovery

Page 33: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Interaction Triangle

Student

Teacher

StudentContent

•Essential Understandings•Course Goals•Student insights

Page 34: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

High School Course Menu

• Astronomy• Consumer Economics• English IV: 20th Century Literature• English IV: AP• Health• U.S. History

Page 35: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Who are the students?

Page 36: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

What is their Achievement Level?

Page 37: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Who are the students?

Page 38: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Student Comparison

District•White – 61%•Black – 9%•Hispanic – 7%•Asian – 19%•Multiracial – 4%

Online•White – 77%•Black -- 4%•Hispanic – 8%•Asian – 9%•Multiracial – 3%

Page 39: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Who are the students?

Page 40: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

iNACOL Demographics Study

www.glickconsulting.com

Page 41: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

iNACOL demographics study

www.glickconsulting.com

Page 42: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

iNACOL Demographics Study

www.glickconsulting.com

Page 43: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

What are their grades?

Page 44: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 45: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 46: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 47: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 48: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 49: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 50: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 51: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 52: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 53: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference
Page 54: Online Learning at Illinois Computing Educators' Conference

Student Advice Only take this course if you

are self-motivated enough to do it. It’s not bad at all if you manage your time wisely and set goals for yourself to finish it on time. I wrote down all of the due dates in my assignment notebook so I could see when they were coming up to remind myself or else I knew that I would probably forget.