Bloom's Sixth


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The fog that settled on the Lawrence campus Monday morning seemed all too fitting. Classes officially resumed after an extended spring break, but Jayhawk Boulevard was mostly empty, as were the buses that passed by. Faculty and students alike ventured into a hazy online learning environment cobbled together with unseen computer chips and hidden strings of code. Even the most optimistic took slow, careful steps onto a path with an uncertain end point. A view east along Jayhawk Boulevard from near Marvin Hall. We’re all feeling disoriented in this virtual fog, and it’s especially important…
Read Moreabout Helping students find their way through a fog of uncertainty online
Posted on by Doug Ward

Financing public higher education has grown increasingly challenging, with state funding for research universities declining by an average of 28 percent since 2003. What were once state-supported institutions have in many cases become quasi-private institutions to which states provide some money but still want full control. To shore up their budgets, state colleges and universities have increased the proportion of out-of-state and international…
Read Moreabout Shoring up budgets with out-of-state tuition
Posted on by Doug Ward

The online training site Lynda.com announced this week that it was canceling its lyndaClassroom program. The classroom program allowed instructors to choose up to five online tutorials for students in a designated class to use during a semester. Students then signed up through Lynda.com and paid $10 a month, or about $35 for a semester. It was an excellent, cost-effective way to help students gain technology skills. The cost was less than most textbooks, making it a useful tool for instructors in many fields. Lynda…
Read Moreabout Lynda.com ends inexpensive student program
Posted on by Doug Ward

James Burns of Boston College uses a term I hadn’t heard before: “swirling students.” Writing in The Evolllution, Burns says swirling students are those who move in and out of college, collecting a few hours here, a few hours there as they move toward a degree. They often have full-time or part-time jobs, families, health problems or financial challenges, he says. Photo by Doug Ward The best way to attract – and keep – those students is through personal attention…
Read Moreabout Education Matters: ‘Swirling’ students and online communication
Posted on by Doug Ward

In a discussion among faculty earlier this week, a conversation about online education quickly turned skeptical. We were exploring the model of the Minerva Schools, which uses a combination of online and experiential learning with a small group of students. It aims to reduce the cost of college by using technology, rather than physical classrooms, and to create cohorts of students who live in and…
Read Moreabout Questions and doubts about online education
Posted on by Doug Ward

Two recent surveys help illustrate the barriers that block much-needed changes in teaching, learning and course design at colleges and universities. In one, conducted by Gallup for Inside HigherEd, most full-time faculty members saw little value in online courses and took an even bleaker view of online courses at their own institutions. The survey found that only 24 percent of full-time faculty members agreed or strongly agreed that…
Read Moreabout Education is changing. When will faculty catch up?
Posted on by Doug Ward

Connecting with students in online courses challenges even the best instructors. I was reminded of that recently when I spoke with Tracy Russo, an associate professor of communication studies, at the C21 Course Redesign Consortium. C21 brings together about 60 instructors from many disciplines at KU who are interested in making learning more active and more meaningful by changing the ways they approach their classes. The discussions teem with…
Read Moreabout How can we connect better with students in online courses?
Posted on by Doug Ward

An organization called Reclaim Open Learning held its first symposium last week. The organization promotes innovation in higher education through the use of technology, online resources and open learning in unconventional ways. The approach and goals of Reclaim Open Learning aren’t for everyone, though …
Read Moreabout Thought-provoking suggestions from a conference on open learning
Posted on by Doug Ward