Tuesday, November 24, 2015

My Thoughts on Distance Education

It's really funny how our perspectives change so quickly. I have been teaching online courses at the college level for about 4 years. For a long time, I resisted teaching courses online. I really thought that online courses in any science or math field would be ineffective. I truly thought that there was no way to convey important information students needed to learn about the sciences online, especially when it came to the labs. It bothered me for a long time. The idea of online courses for the sciences in colleges and universities tend to be frowned upon by many science faculty (or at least that is my experience). It was not until I was asked by my college to teach one of my biology courses online, that I realized that science education in the online format was "doable".
This is an image of a biology wordle that has common words that are related to biology arrange in a picture.
Biology Word Cloud created on Wordle

Over the years, I have worked to improve my online science courses. I have learned that online science courses take much more time, attention, and patience than my face-to-face courses. All that time and effort, however, are well worth it. I have worked hard to improve all my courses, and my online courses are no exception. In effort to keep improving, I decided to complete a graduate program in online education and instructional design. I thought that the more I understood about instructional design, the better I would be at designing online courses for my students.

This fall, I started that graduate program and I am coming on the end of my journey of my first two courses. One of the courses is Foundations in Distance Learning. The course had an interesting set up. Each module related to a variety of "myths" about online education. Each module was a journey for us to understand and work our way through some of the misconceptions about online education. As I made the journey through these myths, I realized that the hesitation by faculty to offer online courses, especially in colleges and universities, was greater than I had thought. I did not realize the extent of the reach that some of these "myths" had on attitudes toward online instruction.

The biggest thing that surprised me in this foundations course is that a lot of the fear that instructors had were due to of lack of experience or training in online education. The fear seems to be in large part due to misconception and lack of experience in the technology. I guess I knew this going in to the course, but I was honestly surprised that the misconceptions were so widespread. While I will save the discussion on the particular myths I learned about in a later post (as well as the data for backing it up), I will say that a large misconception about online learning seems to be from fear of the unknown (which has a lot of components to  it, as mentioned above... such as training and experience). I think a big part of moving forward in online education, especially in the sciences is to make sure we educate our educators about how to teach material online.
This is a word cloud that has words arranged in a cloud relating to online education.
Online Learning Word cloud by V. Holanda

One of the things I will take away from the course, is that online instruction is constantly changing and improving. In order to be an effective online instructor, you must constantly improve your courses and make changes to the course presentation as often as possible. New technologies are always being developed and we have to be willing to adapt to new technologies and apply them when we learn about them.

While my beliefs and attitudes about online education remained the same throughout the course, I will make sure that I spend as much time as possible on continuously improving my courses.

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