Thursday, December 31, 2009

EDUC 8842 - Module 2 Blog

Siemens discussed three elements that will effect distance education, global diversity, communication, and collaborate interaction. It is difficult to choose just one to talk about, but I think the global diversity is one that has had a significant impact on my experiences. I teach several online classes, but my most popular one is Introduction to Linux. The college I work for has a large military population, so many of my students are active duty military. This makes for a very diverse class. A few semesters ago, I had 20 students and only 5 were in the local area. There were 2 in Iraq, 1 in Afghanistan, 1 in Uzbekistan, and the rest were scattered all around the US. Not only was there a geographical diversity, there was a wide range of ages and experiences. The ability to have students share their perspectives and insights about the class with one another provided a very rich and engaging class. The nature of the online class allowed students time to read and process the comments. Then they can have meaningful dialogue and exchange that may not occur in a F2F class. In a traditional F2F class, the more experienced students can dominate the discussions and novices do not have time to process the comments and therefore cannot learn from it.There are so many tools available now that can increase interactions. There are webcams, web conferencing, virtual worlds, instant messaging, and interactive learning management systems. The tools are there, but what we need are people that are trained in how to use the tools. We literally have the world at our fingertips, but yet so much of learning is still in the dark ages. Distance education is still the red-headed step child of education. I know I was told one time at a residency, that my PhD from Walden was still not going to be enough to get me on faculty at an established land-grant university. I hope that someday that sentiment will change and my PhD from Walden will be regarded as if I went to University of Arizona, but I’m not sure I will see that in my lifetime.In searching for some other educational blogs, I came across one that presents arguments against distance education (http://selil.com/?p=1122). And while I don’t agree with everything that is said, he makes some valid points. Sam asks the question, “Can you know that a distance education has truly met the obligations of an education a society expects?” I believe this is what we as educational technology students must address as scholarly practitioners. If we don’t use the tools that are available properly, then we have failed to provide the educational experiences that students and society deserves. Another blog I found http://thejournal.com/articles/2009/06/18/helping-educators-bridge-the-technology-gap.aspx, talks about teaching the teachers. I’ve always felt that we talk a lot about the importance of using Web 2.0 and other technologies, but we don’t focus on making sure the teachers know how to use the tools. It’s great to want to use all the tools, but if no one spends the effort to teach those trying to use it, it won’t be effective. Teachers will either stop using it because it is too much of a hassle to learn it, or the attempts will be minimal and students will disregard it because it comes off as shabby. Things to think about… until next week.

3 comments:

  1. Glad you found my blog interesting. One element that has to be included in the discussion of distance education is the issue of asynchronous and synchronous. As I said in the blog post much is lost when we don't have the ability to discuss in depth on the spot. Think of it this way. Ideas have a certain amount of energy and they feed off of each other and fuel each other. Truly a perpetual energy machine. When we break up the social interaction and the social engagement of the classroom we lose some of that. We can replace it but communication is more than text and words. In the classroom you get a whole person and all of the associated feedback mechanisms. From glassy eyes, to excited interest, these are communicated by more than words or chatter from a computer. I'm not against technology but I am for humans interacting with humans. This is critical for the distance education paradigm.

    Hope to see you around the webz. Dig deeper on Selil.com under the scholarship of teaching and learning category you might find some more stuff you'll like.

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  2. Grace, I think you nailed it when you said,"The ability to have students share their perspectives and insights about the class with one another provided a very rich and engaging class." I've been taking the opportunity of this week off to read ahead for module 3. You will find the material has some great ways to create virtual learning communities in which members build enough trust to allow them many engaging interaction opportunities.

    I agree with you regarding online Universities getting the "respect" they deserve. I can tell you this: I have completed two masters -- one in a traditional environment and the other with Walden. My Walden coursework was more engaging and challenging than my traditional coursework. To quote you again, "The ability to have students share their perspectives and insights about the class with one another provided a very rich and engaging class" sums up my online experiences.

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  3. I think that the online environment utilizes the higher levels of Bloom on a more regular basis than the f2f environment. That fact alone shows that distance education is a high level of learning. I think the fact that there are several piece shop certificates and degrees available on the internet cheapens what is happening at accredited, strong universities. I think in time when students from on line universities become published and strong contenders in their field, and then the views may start to change.

    I agree and like that you brought up the point that we need educated on how to use what is out there and available. I know I have a ton to learn and I work at it, but it is difficult with what I already have on my plate. It is exciting to think about where we can go with what is available.

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