Showing posts with label online learning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label online learning. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

Still Learning Online

One of the criticisms that I have heard about online learning is that it is impersonal and does not provide a community in which one can learn through interactions with others. Perhaps that is true in some models, but it has not been my experience.

There is a robust sense of community that continues to develop as we approach the midway point of the online study group I am facilitating. These are all busy people, juggling a full-time teaching job and managing the courseload in addition to whatever home commitments they have. Yet, through a discussion board, they interact regularly.

I have never met these folks face-to-face (at least that I am aware of), yet I am getting a sense of their personalities, their humor, and their challenges. It is different than the communication you find in traditional professional development settings, but it is still a vibrant learning community.

I suspect that the criticism of online learning is little different from that levied by those who believed that texting, cell phones, e-mail, mp3 players, and even the telephone were going to cripple personal communication as we knew it. Communication methods evolve, but it is hard to imagine a world where communication is not still vital - we might as well embrace the possibilities as new trends emerge.

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Learning Online

A generation ago, distance learning conjured up images of remote locales, with stray learners here and there tuning in to a lecture. Now, though, online learning is increasing in popularity everywhere - the city, the burbs, and outlier areas.

Convenience is a big factor. Much online learning is asynchronous, so people can log in and crank out assignments whenever they wish. For people with busy schedules or odd hours, this may be the difference between furthering one's education or not. In many cases, the price is lower than traditional schooling - another powerful factor.

Recent experience has shown me that it is not only about convenience though - an online course may provide students with a better timetable for learning. Instead of spending a finite, predetermined amount of time on a topic, as one would in a live class, online students can accelerate or decelerate their pace, depending on various factors - complexity of the material, background knowledge, interest level.

In the last year, I have taken an online course and am currently facilitating a graduate course for educators online. These courses have been driven by content rather than technology, and the content has been relevant and comprehensive. I can't say these courses are better or worse than a live version would be, only that they are different. Overall, pursuing this line of learning has been a positive, and I am glad I was open to it.