Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world: the unreasonable one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore all progress depends on the unreasonable man. (Shaw, 1983)
Who are our learners?21st Century Learning
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_A-ZVCjfWf8
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
fluency in multiple media, valuing each for the types of communication, activities, experiences, and expressions it empowers
learning based on collectively seeking, sieving, and synthesizing experiences
active learning based on experience (real and simulated) that includes frequent opportunities for reflection
expression through non-linear, associational webs of representations rather than linear "stories"
co-design of learning experiences personalized to individual needs and preferences (Dede 2006)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
What makes a good hybrid student? Online Evaluation Link
http://www.ion.uillinois.edu/resources/tutorials/pedagogy/selfEval.asp
http://www.ion.uillinois.edu/resources/tutorials/pedagogy/StudentProfile.asp
Recommendations:http://www.ion.uillinois.edu/resources/tutorials/pedagogy/tips.asp
What makes a good hybrid instructor? (iNacol Standards)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
China: 1.3 billion people 20 million 18 year olds 2.5 million college slots With online learning: increase educational opportunities to 100
million new students India:
Universal Access for K-12 Education in 10 years Need 200,000 more schools Shortage of good teachers “Leverage teachers using technology to bring to scale” Educomp Program digitizing learning resources (online content) in
K-12 education View as export opportunity
Turkey: 10 million students in K-12 taking online courses Middle East
Start from scratch and rebuild K-12 Education systems(iNacol 2008)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
1. Alternative energy2. Desalination of water3. Precision farming4. Biometrics5. Quantum computers6. Entertainment on demand7. Global access8.8. Virtual education or distance Virtual education or distance
learninglearning9. Nanotechnology10. Smart Robot(World Future 2009)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
• Internet access– China: 4 million Internet connections in 1999– China: 137 million Internet connections in 2006
• WiMax: 50 km radius of high-speed, wireless, broadband Internet (100 Mbs), mid-to-end 2009
• 3G/4G Wireless: 2010(Patrick 2008)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
Spending on K-12 education Average: $9,969/per pupil in 2007-08 (more than
any country in the world, except Switzerland) International Rankings in Science and Math (PISA
2006):Science: US ranked #25 out of 30 countriesMath: US ranked #21 out of 30 countries
U.S. Math curriculum: full 2 grade levels behind international counterparts by 8th grade
(Patrick 2008)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
High School Graduation Rates Average: 70% in 4 yearsLatino/Hispanic students: 58% African-american students: 55%
15% of high schools produce 50% of drop outs in country
(Patrick 2008)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
High school graduates accepted into college 43% of community college students require
remediation29% of public four-year college students required
remediationCost of $2.7 billion/annuallyAmerican businesses spend $60B annually on
education and re-education of workforce
(Patrick 2008)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
U.S. shortage of students prepared for STEM 77 million engineers in the United States ready to
retire
(Patrick 2008)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
The K-12 online learning market is growing rapidly at 30% annually
In 2007, estimated 1,000,000 enrollments in K-12 online learning in the U.S.
In K-12: 30 states with statewide virtual schools; 44 states with
significant policies/programs (Watson, Keeping Pace, 2008)
More than 50% of all school districts across the United States offer online and distance learning (Americas Digital Schools Report)
18 states with 100,000+ students enrolled in full-time virtual school programs (Center for Education Reform)
(Patrick 2008)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
“Combining face-to-face with fully online components optimizes both environments in ways impossible in other formats” -Educause Research Bulletin, 2004Digital content, curriculum, LMS, online
assessments, data system, AI, simulationsShift in instructional model and training
Struggling student, low-engagement, (More direct student support needed)
Self-direction, high engagement, (Less direct student support needed)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
(Patrick 2008)
• Blended learning should be approached as not only a temporal construct, but rather as a fundamental redesign of the instructional model with the following characteristics:• -A shift from lecture- to student-centered instruction
where students become interactive learners (this shift should apply to entire course, including face-to-face sessions);
• -Increases in interaction between student-instructor, student-student, student-content, and student-outside resources; and
• -Integrated formative and summative assessment mechanisms for student and instructor.” - Educause, Blended Learning (2004)
Introduction to Online and Hybrid Course Development and DeliveryGeorge Williams College
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