Principles for Building Success in Online Education
- By Jacqueline Moloney, Steven Tello
- 02/03/03
As higher education adminstrators,
we faced numerous challenges beginning in 1996 when we launched our online efforts
at UMass-Lowell. Which courses or programs to migrate, what faculty to involve,
and which platform to use are just a few of the many complex decisions that
institutions must confront in building online programs. To help others, we've
created a rubric that covers five strategic areas of decision making:
- Selection of courses and programs
- Faculty development, support, and incentives
- Technology and infrastructure
- Redesign of student services
- Program and course evaluation
A set of four operating principles that evolved with the success of our program
exist as important guides:
- Adhere to your campus mission
- Use traditional academic structures and faculty to accelerate the development
of online education
- Start small, build incrementally, and think scalability
- Build learning communities that push the limits of new technology
Principles in Action
Consistent with the principles above, UMass-Lowell's online education program
started very small, with a handful of pioneering faculty. Like many public universities,
we were trying to identify new markets that could bring needed revenues to the
campus and expand access to our programs. Therefore, the online program was
initiated through the Division of Continuing, Corporate and Distance Education
(CCDE) to address those campus needs. As a self-supporting organization, CCDE
was to identify strategies that would generate sufficient revenues to cover
program development and delivery costs. Working through decisions by employing
the principles previously outlined, we were able to overcome the obstacles that
often inhibit the growth of online education.
The online program at UMass-Lowell now offers six full degree programs and
enrolls approximately 6,000 per year. It is one of the largest online programs
in New England and is a major contributor to UMassOnline, the University of
Massachusetts system-wide effort to provide online education. The program at
Lowell is entirely self-supporting and returns significant revenues to the campus
that seed continuous growth. Below, we examine some of our formative decisions
in the five strategic areas, and consider the operating principles that guided
our choices.
Selection of Courses and Programs
Because of the financial considerations mentioned above, we identified a process
and set of criteria for selecting which programs to move online. First, the
program had to have an established market. Second, the program had to have flexible
requirements that would appeal to multiple audiences and be scalable. To address
those criteria, we examined our potential markets and targeted adult learners
who needed the flexibility and convenience of online education.
All of the courses we selected to migrate online had to fit into a certificate,
and all the certificates had to fit into one of two undergraduate degrees designed
for those seeking degree completion.
Because we had a flourishing market in
information technology, we focused our initial development there and gradually
built out offerings in liberal arts, health, education, and engineering. The
strategy proved successful as evidenced by consistently high enrollments in
the courses and programs. For several years, the program averaged 100 percent
growth, and it now continues to grow at approximately 25 percent annually.
Traditional faculty inform online course design. To ensure its alignment with
the university mission, we purposefully engaged traditional, tenured faculty
in the design of the online program. Rather than ignore their questions, we
used their concerns to guide the design of the program. For example, the faculty
were concerned about losing interaction with their students and about the potential
for lowered standards. To address those concerns, we designed the courses to
enhance interaction and uphold quality. As a result, our online courses mirror
the design and quality of our face-to-face courses. The courses run in a traditional
15-week semester and class size is limited to 30 students. Each week, course
lecture notes are released and students move through the course as a cohort,
learning from each other, guided by the instructor. Courses are delivered asynchronously,
so students and faculty log onto the course at anytime, from anywhere, and participate
and interact through discussion boards and e-mail.
While there are numerous alternatives such as self-paced and competency-based
learning, our online course design is consistent with the academic structure
of our campus. More importantly, the design enabled the faculty to build interaction
into their online courses, a critical concern for quality education. In this
format, faculty and students report at least as much, if not more, interaction
in their online courses as in their face-to-face courses. In fact, the traditional
faculty are now champions of the online program and often serve as mentors to
their colleagues.
Faculty Development, Support, and Incentives
Teaching online requires faculty to transform their courses and related pedagogies.
When we first began our faculty development efforts, we hosted several face-to-face
workshops that consisted of approximately nine hours of training. Consistent
with the principle to start small, and to think scalability, we gradually grew
this initiative into a comprehensive program that supports faculty through four
phases of development.
The first phase provides a 4-week online workshop where faculty learn to teach
online by being online students themselves. This online seminar features important
strategies of online teaching as well as hands-on experience with course management
systems. In the second phase, faculty begin development of their online course
materials and migrate their syllabus, lectures, and other course materials to
the course management system, assisted by development staff and a second 4-week
online seminar. The third phase of development occurs while the faculty teach
their first course, and the fourth phase occurs as faculty redesign their courses
to incorporate more sophisticated online strategies such as case studies and
team projects.
A team of course developers and technical support staff work with the faculty
throughout this process, assisting in course migration and materials development,
ensuring each online course is complete before the start of each semester. With
this model we can migrate approximately 40 new courses annually and support
250 course offerings efficiently and cost effectively. Our development team
now offers a series of development modules for teaching online, on the Web,
to our faculty, as well as those from colleges and universities across the country
(http://continuinged.uml.edu/online/institutes.htm).
A key component to our success in building the online program is a system of
intrinsic and extrinsic rewards that faculty receive for their participation.
A detailed intellectual property agreement as well as course development stipends
provide the extrinsic protection and renumeration agreed to by the faculty.
As important, an extensive range of professional development opportunities provide
faculty with the intrinsic rewards they appreciate.
Selecting a Course Management System
UMass-Lowell's criteria for selection of a CMS included the following:
- Installed on local equipment
- Based on an industry-standard relational database
- Allows access to any course or enrollment data through commercial,
data query software
- Supports integration with other campus systems through commercially
available scripting software
- Allows substitution of integrated components such as chat, discussion
forums, and testing tools
- Provides a forms-based interface for the development of course materials
as well as instructor course management
- D'es not require specific software for student access or instructor
course development
- Supports the integration of various multimedia and plug-in software
modules
- D'es not require a perpetual, per-seat license fee
- Vendor agrees to meet with us twice a year to discuss upgrades and
modifications to the system
Technology and Infrastructure
Making informed technology choices is key to a successful online program. One
of the most formidable decisions colleges face in the development of online
programs is the selection of hardware and software for the delivery of their
online program. The process can be intimidating, considering the many course
management system (CMS) vendors, course publishers, and other companies, each
claiming to offer the best solution for your campus. Our approach to selecting
the appropriate hardware and software followed the principles outlined earlier
in this article. The initial technology investment was relatively small, involving
use of a Web server and list server already owned by the university. However,
to expand the program beyond technology-savvy faculty and into more disciplines,
we had to provide an easy-to-use system for both the development and teaching
of online courses.
Consistent with the principles outlined earlier, we sought a vendor that would
respect the experience that our faculty brought to the table to inform the development
of new generations of the CMS product. The ideal course management system should
facilitate interaction between students and faculty; provide for easy course
development and management; and provide a robust, scalable system that supports
24x7 service. The willingness of our vendor, IntraLearn, to work with us in
order to improve the utility of the software for our program has proven critical
in supporting the growth of our online program.
Redesign of Student Services
Before we launched our online program, students typically registered for courses
by telephone or in person, and all administrative processes required an original,
hard copy student signature. Course schedules, program descriptions, academic
policies, and other program-related materials were printed and snail-mailed
to students. Very early in the process, it became clear that we had to redesign
the culture of our student services division to support online students.
Rather than announcing and implementing a large-scale redesign effort, our
initial redesign work simply focused on forms and information. We asked the
question, "If I lived on the opposite side of the country, how would I
apply to a degree program? Drop a course? Talk to an advisor?" This approach
was practical, non-threatening, and allowed student service staff to help develop
solutions to the challenges raised by having online students.
Moving beyond online forms and information, we also recognized the unique needs
of online students. Participation in an online course requires that students
have a minimal technical aptitude and sense of themselves as a learner. Technical
staff partnered with student service staff to provide both face-to-face orientation
sessions and online orientation programs that detailed both technical and pedagogical
considerations for students taking online courses. Most recently, staff have
developed an online assessment that allows students to complete a brief online
quiz that examines their technical knowledge, learning style, and ability to
manage time—all factors that appear to contribute to student success in online
education.
Program and Course Evaluation
From the outset, we established clear benchmarks so that the administration
and faculty could assess the viability of the program. First, we established
the principle that faculty and student experiences should be rated equal or
better than the on-campus experience. An online evaluation process was implemented
that examined student perspectives regarding the quality of course materials,
instruction, student services, and technical services.
The results of the student evaluations are reviewed at the course and program
level in an effort to identify the strengths and weaknesses of the program.
This annual open discussion with online faculty regarding the online students'
experiences provides an opportunity to discuss strategies for improving the
online program. Several changes implemented as a result of this survey process
and discussion include the expansion of technical support hours, the option
of using multiple discussion and chat tools by faculty, the development of online
faculty training, and modification of the CMS.
In addition to examining student perceptions regarding the quality of our online
program, we also examine course and program persistence rates each semester.
Another important benchmark has been the percentage of full-time, tenured faculty
who have supported the growth and scholarship of our online program. The faculty
development programs previously described have resulted in a steady increase
of the percentage of tenured faculty teaching in our online program, to 35 percent
of all instructors.
While we have developed internal metrics for establishing the quality of our
students' online learning experiences, colleges and universities must remain
cognizant of regional and professional accreditation standards that provide
external mechanisms for monitoring the quality of higher education. Accreditation
standards for online education require campuses to provide the same levels of
assurance currently required of on-campus programs, and we track our progress
toward those standards accordingly.
Challenges for the Future
Enrollment trends point to the need for accelerated integration of online education;
yet some colleges and many faculty have yet to engage in this important opportunity.
To move forward, institutions must chart a strategy that will best suit their
campus mission. One of the strengths of American higher education is its relentless
pursuit of opportunities that will enhance the educational experiences of our
students and faculty. To continue that pursuit requires that we take hold of
this new frontier and drive the technology so that we maximize opportunities
to improve teaching and learning.