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Online Teaching/Learning
Online Teaching/Learning Quotations
Virtual Campus using "Real
education" services whose principle is that "any
service a student can get on campus, an online student can
get with CU online". Source unknown
"In the future, as
higher education shifts from traditional classroom teaching
to on-line learning, academic support programs will increasingly
become more in demand by on-line learners especially advising,
career preparation, learning skills, orientation, tutoring,
and intervention to overcome on-line technical problems.
However, although many services may be made available on-line,
academic support for both faculty and students will still
be necessary for many students since they may be miles from
the parent institution offering the course and will insist
on some face-to-face interaction with academic support personnel."
Frank L. Christ. “Academic Support Programs” entry in
Higher Education in the United
States: An Encyclopedia.
Santa Barbara,
CA: ABC-CLIO
Publishers
“Online learning now depends
more on the ability of educators and trainers to tutor and
support learners online than on the technology itself.”
Dr. Ian Heywood, 2000 World Open Learning Conference
and Exhibition, Birmingham,
England.
"Most university students
have never been formally taught to learn how to study, either
in high school or college." Gardner, L. (1998).
Why we must change: The research evidence. Thought
and Action. 14 (Spring), 71-88.
"the
challenge is not simply to incorporate learning technologies
into current institutional approaches, but rather
to change our fundamental views about effective teaching
and learning and to use technology to do so" ( Higher
Education in an Era of Digital Competition: Choices and
Challenges by Donald E. Hanna and Associates. Atwood Publishing,
2000, p.61.
"Faculty are
moving forward, technologies are improving, and student
demand is increasing -- but few changes are taking place
in the university structure as a whole to accommodate the
special needs of the distance-learning student."
Richard Bothel, dean of continuing education and distance
learning at Troy
State University.
http://www.westga.edu/~distance/ojdla/spring41/bothel41.html
"Faculty developers
can learn much from colleagues who work in learning assistance
programs on campus. Transforming universities into fully
integrated learning communities is a requirement for promoting
academic success in the new millennium. When the "millennial
students" walk onto campus, it's time to call upon
those who know them first hand." The Millennial
Learner—Challenges and Opportunities: Saundra Yancy McGuire
(Director of the Center for Academic Success and Adjunct
Associate Professor of Chemistry at Louisiana State University
in Baton Rouge, Louisiana) and Dennis A. Williams at POD
Conference in Vancouver.
"Preparing students
today for tomorrow's workforce has a lot to do with teaching
about how to use and evaluate knowledge. The Internet is
rapidly becoming the biggest repository of information we
have ever known. The key will be in our ability to find,
evaluate and use the information it provides. We need to
teach analytical and organizational skills. Students must
know how to evaluate data. Gone are then days when students
spent their time memorizing facts that were readily available
at their fingertips. Students need to learn communication
and study skills. We must give them the type of tools that
prepare them for lifelong learning, so they know how to
study and how to evaluate the importance of what they learn."
Leight, M. Converge (December 2000, 3(12)
11.
“Online students can be better retained, experience
greater course satisfaction, and learn more in less time
with greater ease and confidence when an online course is
linked to an Academic Support System and is designed with
activities and information that assist them to become a
collegial group and to learn more effectively and efficiently.”
Christ, F.L. Achieving student retention, satisfaction,
and success through online pedagogy. A
presentation at TechEd Long
Beach, February 26, 2002.
"Student retention in the online course is a major
concern. ... ... "...the availability of information
resources and assistance throughout the course are some
solutions to high online drop-out rates."
Moore,
G.S., Winograd, K. and D. Lange. (2001). You can teach online: Building a creative learning environment.
McGraw-Hill Higher Education. p.
3.5
"...primary variables responsible for discriminating
between completers and non-completers included three of
the Likert scale factors: study environment, motivation,
and computer confidence."
Osborn, V. (2001). Identifying at-risk students in videoconferencing and web-based distance
education. The American Journal
of Distance Education, 15:1, 47.
"A third area of concern for distance students
is the lack of support and services such as providing tutors,
academic planners and schedulers, and technical assistance.
The isolation that results from the distance learning process
can complicate the learning process for adult students.
Support for distance learners should not be overlooked when
planning distance programs. Students need tutors and academic
planners to help them complete courses on time and to act as a support system
when stress becomes a problem. Galusha, J. (1997).
Barriers to learning in distance education. Interpersonal
Computing and Technology. Retrieved at http://www.emoderators.com/ipct-j/1997/n4/galusha.html
“The fifth challenge facing the use of the Web in universities
is to how best use the Web to encourage good learning behaviours
in students. Most good learning behaviours rely on metacognition
and this is universally regarded as an essential attribute
of good learning. … …Encouraging metacognition develops
students' knowledge of the nature of their learning, of
their effective learning strategies, and of their learning
strengths and weakness. … …The Web has potential in this
area to meet this challenge if appropriate instructional
design strategies are employed in the development of material
for the Web. It is unlikely to occur if lecturers just mount
their printed course material and use the Web as a convenient
delivery medium. If the design of courses allows individual
exploration coupled with reflection and the comparison of
a student's views with others, as well as the encouragement
of good learning behaviours, then metacognition can be enhanced
and good learning can result.
Fetherston, T. (2001). Pedagogical Challenges for the World Wide Web. Educational Technology Review. 9:1. Retrieved January 21, 2002 at http://www.aace.org/pubs/etr/fetherston.cfm
"Learning Centers can
be viewed as the education provider's physical and social
"Point of Presence" with the distance learner.
As such, learners should expect to find an array of functions
and services supporting their distance education activities
offered at or facilitated through the Learning
Center
site." IPSE (Indiana
Partnership for Statewide Education) –‘Learning Centers
& Three Tiered Distance Education Delivery Model'
Retrieved September
12, 2002 from http://www.ihets.org/consortium/ipse/learningcentermodel.html
“Connect the Disconnected”
Dr. Ray Ganey, Cochise College,
AZ
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