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The “Spill-Over” Effect of E-Learning Claudine SchWeber, Ph.D. Office of Distance Education and Lifelong Learning cschweber@umuc.edu www.umuc.edu/distance/odell/ Tel Aviv University, Israel, February 2002 Fulbright Senior Specialist Program
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The “Spill-Over” Effect Online Services initially provided for distance faculty and students, now required for everyone.
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Services that support teaching and learning Administrative support Assessing costs Linking quality and cost Planning for the immediate future ISSUES The “irreversible transformation of higher education”
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Supporting Teaching and Learning Library resources Course materials 24/7 IT Support Instructional design support Advisement Online Access to Faculty
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Administrative Support Application Registration/drop-add –long term class schedules Grade Reports Book purchases Tuition Robust IT infrastructure –high % “up” time –24/7HELP - telephone (synchronous); online (asynchronous) –Problem solutions needed quickly
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Examples (1) UMUC offers over 100 databases-free to students, faculty worldwide E-reserves in the online class 24/7 librarian help Required library resources course/tutorial for all students and new faculty Faculty workshops online: plagiarism detection; use of resources, developing interaction Faculty resources and plagiarism guides www.umuc.edu/library/faculty.html Library and Information Resources
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Examples (2) Instructional design and IT support (ex., LTAs or simulations) Training about teaching online Workshops Mentors Course Updating Discipline focus For 3 models: –Online –F2F and Online Enhanced –Web-Integrated Faculty Development
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Administrative Support Text purchases –Online: contract with a company –Onsite: bookstore Articles, reports, etc –Databases –In the online classes Reserve reading (with copyright permission obtained) Webliography Example (1): Books, Articles
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Cost Issues Is the cost for online education distinguishable from the cost of higher education? Prioritizing and allocating funds Cost models –cost-effectiveness –cost-benefit –cost-feasibility Linking quality and cost
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Linking Quality and Cost Identify institutional quality indicator (s) Identify measure (s) for each indicator Identify desired impact/goal Select and apply cost model
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Future Plans Scope of virtual services and support Input from key stakeholders Communicate to all parties Re-assess plans/scope, priorities, funding costs feedback update/change plans
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Toda Raba Sheelot?
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