Bookstore Council 3 2 09

44
Strategic Technology Plan, Open Educational Resources, Legislation and Bookstores 1 Cable Green eLearning Director 3/2/09

description

 

Transcript of Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Page 1: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Strategic Technology Plan,Open Educational Resources, Legislation and Bookstores

1

Cable GreeneLearning Director

3/2/09

Page 2: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

I’m here to listen and learn…

please interrupt me…

let’s chat throughout.

2

Page 3: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Technology TransformationTask Force

The strategic technology plan is the product of an 18-month analysis conducted by the Technology Transformation Task Force of the SBCTC for the purpose of creating a roadmap for how our system needs to leverage 21st century technologies to support student achievement.

Conversation went something like this: Video

3http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e50YBu14j3U

Page 4: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

http://techplan.sbctc.edu

4

Page 5: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Strategy I: Create a single, system-wide suite of online teaching and learning tools that provides all Washington students with easy access to “anywhere, anytime” learning.

Strategy II: Create a seamless P-20 system for personalized online student services including: recruitment, retention, advising, course catalogue, transfer, and financial aid management.

Strategy III: Create a system of lifelong learning and change management for faculty, staff and college leadership.

Strategy IV: Use data to drive continuous improvement in both student success and administrative efficiency.

Strategy V: Treat information technology as a centrally funded, baseline service in the system budget.

Five strategies for transformation

5

Page 6: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Recommendations / Big Ideas

Access for all students and all colleges Single, centrally funded solutions for

common systems Rule of 1: do it once Rule of 0: don’t do it

Don’t build software, don’t host servers Retain local branding and admin control

6

Page 7: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Recommendations / Big Ideas Cost Savings

licenses, hosting, help desk, professional development transaction costs: integration, RFPs, vendor relationships

Value Proposition Don’t focus local resources (people, money, time) on commodity

technology services Use best solutions wherever they may be

Video

7

Page 8: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Recommendations / Big Ideas Have a P-20 conversation

New IT Governance CIS moved to SBCTC Align decision making, policy and funding

Open Educational Resources Use others and share our digital content Move toward open textbooks

8

Page 9: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Work Completed

Elluminate (system + HECB) 1300+ faculty & staff accounts 3000+ rooms online 700+ meetings have taken place

WashingtonOnline “Angel” LOR, sharing courses, ePortfolio

24/7 virtual library reference SLOAN-C College Pass

9

Page 10: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Work Completed

Reduced WashingtonOnline Technology Fee

Old WAOL Technology Fee: $8 / credit / student / course

New WAOL Technology Fee: $4 / user / quarter Unlimited use: one or more ANGEL courses, ePortfolios

and/or collaboration spaces Old: Three 5-credit courses in WAOL was $120 New: Three (or more) 5-credit courses in WAOL is $4

10

Page 11: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Ongoing Online Learning Growth

2004 annualized FTE = 9,372 2008 annualized FTE = 18,038 Over 83,000 students learn online each year eLearning enrollments up more than 23%

(Fall 07 – Fall 08) Growth projections: by 2019, 51% or 78,344

of system FTE will be enrolled in online or hybrid courses

11

Page 12: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Ongoing Online Learning Growth

45% of all CTC graduates earn 15 or more credits online or hybrid

2008 summer online enrollments increased between 30 and 216 percent

23 colleges offer 86 different degrees and certificates online

16 colleges offer an AA degree online Community and Technical Colleges teach over

80% of all online FTE in WA higher education

12

Page 13: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Growth in Online CoursesFall FTE: 1998-2011

1998-2008 growth = 4,435%

Page 14: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Growth in Online CoursesFall Headcount: 1998-2011

1998-2008 growth = 3,543%

Page 15: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Growth in Online CoursesAnnualized FTE: 1998-2011

1998-2008 growth = 1,818%

Page 16: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Growth in Online CoursesAnnualized Headcount: 1998-2011

1998-2008 growth = 1,136%

Page 17: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Presidents & State Board Understand the Need to Change Presidents & State Board voted

unanimously to support the Strategic Technology Plan

 WACTC Technology Committee track implementation of the Strategic

Technology Plan: “Score Card” communicate system solutions

17

Page 18: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Funding System Solutions is the Greatest Challenge

Leverage the buying power of entire system Cost effective to use common systems and

support services Large travel and per diem offsets using

technology Association Conference in Elluminate 1 ½ day Commission / Council meeting = $10K+

18

Page 19: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

“This plan represents our sense of extreme urgency to catch up, keep up and provide all colleges and students the technological tools and services they need to

succeed in the 21st century.”

19

Page 20: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

What is Next for WashingtonOnline?

Colleges looking at ANGEL (lower tech fee) new capability to share content system-wide

Use existing Pooled Enrollment In bad budget times – colleges close programs.

How will you deliver your students the courses they need?

Enrolling College – keeps all FTE & Tuition Teaching College – gets $50/credit hour/student Student gets the course she needs! WashingtonOnline facilitates – takes no $

20

Page 21: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

What is Next?

Redesign and Open Common Courses Open textbooks, open courseware Teams of faculty, librarians, instructional designers,

graphic artists … bookstores? “Go-Forward” (administrative systems) Leveraging networked IT Services “in the cloud”

Allows colleges to “go core” i.e., focus on learning and student services

21

Page 22: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Let’s Look @ Open

Textbooks

Dr. Judy BakerDean, Foothill Global Access

Director, Community College Consortium for Open Educational

Resources

(…next set of slides are “mashed up” Judy slides)

www.collegeopentextbooks.org

Page 23: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Community College Consortiumfor Open Educational Resources

Joint effort to develop and use open educational resources and open textbooks

in community college courses

cccoer.wordpress.com

Page 24: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Community CollegeOpen Textbook Project Goal

Identify, organize, and support the production and use of high quality, accessible and culturally relevant Open

Textbooks for community college students

Reduce the cost of

textbooks!

Page 25: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

84 colleges

from AZ, C

A,

IA, MD, N

V, NY,

OH, TX, W

A,

Ontario

CCCOER Membership

Page 26: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Comparison of Statistics Textbooks

Publisher: Wiley Open: Connexions & QOOP

Downloadable version:

$77.50

Downloadable & online versions:

FREE

Printed bound version:

$141.95 new

$110.25 used

Printed bound version:

$31.98 new

Page 27: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

General Physics

        

600 pages

New $179.00 

Used

$125.00  

Page 28: Bookstore Council 3 2 09
Page 29: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Benefits

Lowers the costs of educational materials

for students...

Page 30: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Challenges Faculty and student

resistance to change

Limited availability of high quality and comprehensive learning materials in some disciplines

Inadequate access to high-speed Internet by students

Page 31: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Challenges Compliance with accessibility requirements

Printing and computer lab demands on campus by students

Coordination with campus bookstores

Page 32: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Open Textbook Adoption

Locate open textbooks for consideration

Evaluate each textbook for selection

Customize, remix, and organize selected textbook

Disseminate in print and digital formats

http://emharrington.com/rex/images/adoptadog/Adopt_Me.jpg

Page 33: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Locate Open Textbooksfor Consideration

CCC OER

MERLOT Connexions Wikibooks OER Commons Global Text Project

http://rtnl.files.wordpress.com/2007/01/thinker21.jpg

Page 34: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Evaluate Each Textbook Quality Accessibility Cultural relevance Currency Authority of Source Reading level Depth and scope Quality and

Accuracy Articulation

Page 35: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Customize, Remix, and Organize

Page 36: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Disseminate Open Textbook Digital formats

Printed format

Student (DIY)

Campus bookstore

Campus print-shop services

Proprietary services

http://images.lexcycle.com/screenshots/feedbooks_library.jpg

Page 37: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Faculty Role

Need faculty to help create, review, and promote use of open textbooks

Support release timefor development and modification of open textbooks

Give credit toward tenure for faculty work on open textbook development

Page 38: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

What Happens if weDon’t Change?

Google, Amazo

n, Apple, O

pen Sourc

e,

Open Content, O

pen Textbooks…

Higher EducationFu

nct

ion

al P

oss

ibili

ties

Time

Harder to catch-up …

Or even understand.

38

Page 39: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Higher Education’s Future Role?“I’ve been trying to gain a better sense of the role universities will play in society in the future. At one point, we thought content was the value point of universities. Wrong. MIT’s OpenCourseWare initiative changed that. Ok, then the interaction with faculty is the value point. And wrong again. Open communication and collaboration in online environments with networks of peers and experts gave us control over our interactions. Fine. Then the value point is accreditation. Yes, for now. Our ability to rate, review, comment, and provide feedback has increased with the development of the read/write web. I’m not sure how long we can build education’s value on the concept of accreditation.”

39George Siemens: blog post: explaining leads to information

Page 40: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Cable’s Answer… I think

Our new role (at least for now) is to be synthesizers and leverage networked IT, networked knowledge, and networked expertise… and put together high quality, cost effective learning environments that help more students get to higher levels of education.

40

Page 41: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Bookstores Future Role?

41

Bookstores are perfectly positioned to be the College’s clearinghouse for printed open educational resources. print-on-demand open textbooks & OER course packs Students want printed options (Course Correction)

Have location and are tightly networked into IT and fiscal campus operations. e.g., students can use fin aid @ bookstores

Page 42: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Bookstores Future Role?

42

Open Textbook Commercial Affiliates Work with them like you work with existing

commercial Publishers Flat World Knowledge: interested in

bookstores buying print copies of open textbooks at reduced rates.

Your ideas? Let’s chat.

Page 43: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

Legislation

43

HB 1025 / SB 5778 HB 1946

Page 44: Bookstore Council 3 2 09

http://blog.oer.sbctc.edu http://blog.elearning.sbctc.edu

Dr. Cable GreeneLearning [email protected]

(360) 704-4334