Shortlink

Online Education Favors Experienced Writers

A friend of mine enrolled in an online degree program this year, which is primarily asynchronous. As a life-long and avid reader, she is also a strong writer.
When she began the course, she emailed me with the subject line “idiots” to say that all her classmates were frustrating her to no end. They didn’t engage with her at an educated level, she complained. One of her classmates wrote an essay riddled with grammatical errors, and she was appalled to have to give feedback on it. And the professor, she complained, wasn’t holding the class to high enough standards.
Her reaction made me feel both sad and angry. I could understand her frustration, but it bothered me to know that her classmates were not idiots. In all likelihood, they were simply inexperienced writers.
I wrote back (some of this is paraphrased, and any identifying information has been removed or altered):

“I am really sad to hear how annoyed you feel toward your fellow students. About the paper with the poor grammar, sure, the student’s writing is sub-par, and her paper topic needs a complete rewrite, but more than half of all students at all universities can’t write well. Most of the time they know it, too, and they feel self-conscious about it.
“Disregarding your classmates because of their poor writing will only close you off from learning from the people around you. Most of them I’m sure don’t have solid writing skills, which can become a pain point in an online course where the majority of the discussions are written. But that doesn’t mean they don’t have something to contribute or significant ideas to express; they just have an extremely difficult time expressing those ideas, as well as thinking them through clearly. But that’s what they are there to learn.”

So if you are new to teaching or learning in an environment where most of the communication is written (chatting or instant-messaging, asynchronous postings, email), please be sensitive to the fact that many many people can’t write well and don’t enjoy writing. Help them think through their ideas and express themselves more clearly by asking pointed questions. Show genuine interest and care in how you phrase those questions. The worse possible outcome for an inexperienced writer who is joining an online course is to feel beaten down by his or her inability to write.
When people feel ashamed of how they write, they stop contributing to the conversation, and the whole class’s level of engagement suffers. Keep these people engaged and moving forward. It doesn’t take much. All you have to do is show interest and sincerity.

Shortlink

Crisis Communication: How to Reach Students and Faculty

Being an online student or teacher arguably has safety advantages after a number of killings in the news. One of the responses to these incidents has been an increased awareness of the need and plans for communication.
Even though I teach in the classroom currently, I have not been a recipient of any alerts until I received text messages from Tufts University about a water main break in Greater Boston, which impacted me even though I wasn’t on campus then. Here is how Tufts plans for crisis communication, an important lesson for any school, whether online or campus-based.

Shortlink

Wal-Mart Workers Prefer Online Over Classroom

In the ongoing debate about the relative advantages of online and classroom education, Wal-Mart employees have taken a stance. In a survey, nearly three-quarters “preferred online study to attending a local college”. The educational opportunities will be offered through American Public University (APU), with about 70,000 students, a number that will undoubtedly swell soon.
APU will “enable Walmart and Sam’s Club U.S. associates to earn a college degree at an affordable price through a combination of academic credit awarded for Walmart job learning and experience, and online coursework through APU”, according to APU .
The Boston Globe article went on to say that “students won’t have to pay for credits awarded based on their training,” which can be used for business courses. “Wal-Mart said the school will have evaluated for credit jobs held by 70 percent of Wal-Mart workers by 2012,” which is one 1 million workers.
The only large scale e-learning effort to rival this I can recall is a number of years ago when the US Army announced partnerships with a slew of online schools to encourage education during service regardless of location or frequent changes in location.
I wonder how APU plans to ramp up? And I wonder how many Wal-Mart employees are using their employee discounts to stock up on notebooks and pens – or laptops.

Shortlink

Blue-haired Chef Jason Santos on e-learning

Jason Santos is appearing on the new season of “Hell’s Kitchen”, competing with other renowned chefs. This has nothing to do with e-learning per se; I interviewed him and Jody Adams at CHI a year ago and he had a lot to say about e-learning. When I asked if it is possible to learn to cook online, the blue-haired chef’s response was that it was “the silliest thing he had heard in his life.”

Shortlink

Simple Tricks to be a Better Teacher

NPR’s Talk of the Nation had a recent piece with Doug Lemov on the very simple things teachers can do to be a better teacher.
If you don’t have 39 minutes, the first 6 minutes are the most inspirational.
Enjoy!