Faculty; Teaching; Articles, Papers, and Reports; and Contributed by Organizations or Campuses
With Students Flocking Online, Will Faculty Follow?
| Title: | With Students Flocking Online, Will Faculty Follow? (ID: CSD5561) | | Author(s): | Andrew Guess (Inside Higher Ed) | | Origin: | Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (11/18/2008) | | Type: | Articles, Papers, and Reports | | Abstract: | As online courses’ popularity continues to rise, many administrators are struggling with a steep learning curve, one whose ultimate end point is far from being determined. Questions such as how such courses should be taught (by adjuncts or full-time faculty?) often depend on institutions’ missions (expand access or generate extra revenue?) and can lead to clashes and tensions between proponents of online learning and those who remain wedded to the traditional classroom.
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Distance Education and Teaching Issues: Are Teacher Training and Compensation Keeping Up with Institutional Demands?
| Title: | Distance Education and Teaching Issues: Are Teacher Training and Compensation Keeping Up with Institutional Demands? (ID: CSD1194) | | Author(s): | Reita Gorman (Arkansas State University) | | Origin: | Contributed by Organizations or Campuses (1999) | | Type: | Articles, Papers, and Reports | | Abstract: | During March and April of 1998, a survey was distributed to 60 faculty at Arkansas State who had taught at least one course by compressed video to distance sites for the university. The purpose of this study was to determine how teachers, currently using distance education methods for course delivery, viewed the strengths and weaknesses of the method and its approach to educational instruction. Secondly, this study sought to determine whether teachers felt they had been sufficiently trained in adjusting their curriculum and instructional design to meet the needs of the distance learner. This study also investigated what methods faculty members utilized in the delivery of their courses. Finally, the affects on workload and compensation were assessed to determine whether teaching loads are still being determined in the traditional way by this university. | | View this resource: | |
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