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Question 1: Reasons to Create an Online Course
The primary reason for creating an online course is to provide access.
Professionals who want to learn more in their field, for example, may have
difficulty going back to school or even taking night classes. Oil workers in
Venezuela who need petroleum engineering courses, in-service K-12 teachers who
want formal course work in their subject, and ranchers in West Texas who want
agribusiness courses—they all need these courses provided someplace other than
a traditional academic setting. Likewise, high school or college students can
take courses online that are not available at their own campuses. Home
schooling, growing rapidly as an alternative to public schools, can also
benefit from the educational richness of online courses.
But online courses provide more than just access. Good online courses offer
a quality of instruction that cannot be matched by face-to-face instruction.
Online instruction can incorporate a broader range of information, integrating
course content with the informational resources of the Web. Students can
interact and work together in ways that are not possible or practical in
face-to-face education (Collison, Elbaum, Haavind, & Tinker, 2000). Space
and time barriers to collaborative work on plans, projects, reports, and other
learning tasks are removed. Virtual field trips to museums, historical sites,
foreign countries, and the like already create learning opportunities that are
not otherwise practical. The day is coming when such trips will be expanded to
university research labs, corporate business offices, government agencies, and
expeditions into remote parts of the world. (Ü
The Quest ChannelÝ is an existing low-tech example.)
Question 2: Justifying the Extra Work
Online courses present a few immediate and often time-consuming challenges.
First, they require a lot of technical support. It is essential to have a Web
server and a webmaster, and useful to have help from instructional designers.
Second, online courses require a good deal of time using e-mail and electronic
conferencing with students. Third, online courses frequently require the
instructor to re-think some basic concepts, including how he or she approaches
teaching. This is especially true for teachers accustomed to the lecture mode,
because online teaching does not readily support lecturing. Even with streaming
audio and video, online lectures are invariably less stimulating than
face-to-face ones. Finally, online courses have to be marketed well in order to
be effective. Competition among online courses is fierce, technology fees mean
that online courses often cost more, and there is no complete national registry
for online courses. A few years back, I created an online course
in biomedical research (BIMS470), mainly because my career has been in that area. But
since I failed to identify my market, enrollments remained low. I have since
discovered a possible market among high school science teachers who want to be
better equipped to talk about biomedical research and whose administration
encourages post-graduate course work. Effective marketing often requires the
help of a professional. At a minimum, the instructor needs to develop contacts
and cultivate potential markets.
Despite these challenges, the benefits of an online course outweigh the time
consumed creating it. Two benefits have already been named: increased access
and the potential for improved quality of instruction. A third is perhaps the
most important. Moving to online teaching forces critical reflection on
teaching philosophy and goals, which improves the effectiveness of
teaching—online or not. Online teaching also presents new opportunities for
learning activities. Group cooperative learning, for example, is easier online,
because asynchronous meetings eliminate schedule conflicts. Even synchronous
meetings are easier online because space and distance barriers are removed.
Question 3: Designing and Packaging the Course
Initial Considerations. When designing an online course, you'll
need to consider the following:
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How to revise existing learning activities to make them suitable for online delivery
, or how to create new ones. Online courses benefit from such learning activities as
topic dialogue, group-based decision making, case studies, reports, and
ÜWeb QuestsÝ (systematic searches of Web sites to solve a
problem or develop a cohesive information base).
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How to administer examinations.
Exams may need to be proctored by third parties. A greater percentage of
the final grade may be based on the learning activities described above
rather than on exams.
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How to handle electronic
interactions. Typical e-mail discussions not only generate too much mail
but also lead to superficial opinion exchanges. (See Collison, Elbaum,
Haavind, & Tinker [2000] for remedies.) I find it more satisfying to
use asynchronous computer conferencing with a focus on teamwork and
academic deliverables. Groups need constructivist activities that generate
a product, such as a group decision, plan, project, report, or case study
(see Klemm, 1998 a-c and the On-line Collaboration Applications in Education and Training Web site (no longer active). In
an asynchronous electronic conference, students can post messages and work
on group projects when it is most convenient for them. Materials are
always available for annotation and update.
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How to provide information using
methods other than lectures. Simply putting lecture notes on a Web site is
not enough. Online tutorials and slide shows help, as do textbooks,
articles, and links to Web sites. Compulsive lecturers may broadcast
lectures via streaming audio and video, but why bother when the Web opens
the opportunity for more active and student-centered learning?
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What to put on the home page.
The home page should contain what you'd provide on the first day of a
traditional class: links to course objectives, course organization (what
topics will be covered when), grading standards, and contact information
(the professor's e-mail and phone number, as well as a link to his or her
personal Web site). You might also include a site map and a search field.
Casual viewers should have free access to this page, but you can restrict
access to the rest of the site by requiring an ID and password.
Choosing Software. Once these design issues are addressed, the next
step is to decide how to deliver the course. The easiest way to get a course
online is to use a commercial course management system (CMS), such as WebCT,
Blackboard, First Class, or Top Class. Such systems are usually licensed and
maintained by the institution, which may make a given platform mandatory for
its telecampus. CMSs are very popular largely because they are template-driven:
authors fill in forms, and Web pages magically appear.
CMSs have their limitations. While they they accomplish basic tasks easily,
they generally:
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require a third-party
administrator for many functions
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lack flexibility and limit
design options
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perform certain functions
unsatisfactorily (e.g., group-based production of academic deliverables)
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omit certain features
instructors may want (e.g., seamless integration with other software)
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risk obsolescence when better
technology comes along
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cost a lot
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enforce conformity
My campus makes a CMS available but not mandatory. I chose to do it myself
using a Web editor. I created the course in Microsoft FrontPage, which is no
more difficult than Microsoft Word. In fact, learning FrontPage on my own took
less time than learning WebCT in my university's formal training program.
Even without a CMS, I found I was able to incorporate necessary functions
into my course Web site. Compare the popular functions of a CMS and my
solutions:
1.
Automated
registration and grade books.
Most CMSs allow students to register for courses online
and to be entered automatically in a grading spreadsheet. My webmaster created
an HTML form for online registration; the information can be downloaded into an
Excel spreadsheet for grading. Other registration functions (fee payment, grade
records, etc.) are handled in the old fashioned way, at the registrar's office.
2.
Restricted
access, for authorized students only.
A few lines of Visual Basic code do the same for my
homemade Web site.
3.
Scheduling
calendars.
I
already have very good scheduling software through Palm Pilot and Groupwise. For
a Web course, I can easily create an HTML course calendar in WordPerfect (but
apparently not Word).
4.
E-mail
support. My
students and I use the university's e-mail system, as do professors and
students at most institutions.
5.
Bulletin-board
discussion forums.
I find this popular feature of CMSs limiting. Such ÜthreadedÝ topic
discussions consist of separate e-mail messages, which do not convert easily to
academic deliverables. For my course, I use FORUM98 (link no longer active, but other free forum products are available),
a program that uses hypertext as the
organizing principle. Students can write Üin the marginsÝ with
in-context pop-up notes and links to other documents, and can insert text and
graphics on the same shared pages. This is more advanced than using e-mail software
that can send HTML links. It is not a typical threaded-topic discussion board
because FORUM documents are hypertext linked. You don't attach notes to other
notes; you attach notes to specific places within a note. Users can
create Ücommunity documentsÝ in which a student group can jointly
edit and make annotations directly on the document itself (Klemm, 1998c).
A good online course has good content. The CMS wrapper doesn't provide
this—the course author does. Authors also add learning aids with such features
as automated self-study quizzes, crossword puzzles, slide shows, case study
programs, intelligent-agent Übots,Ý computer simulations, and
computer conferencing environments. Too many online courses are casually
generated without such features. The resources to create good Web pages make a
CMS unnecessary—and teachers without the resources should perhaps not offer
online courses.
Getting started. The most important thing about getting started is
to get started early. When I created my course, it took the better part of a
year even though I was converting the course from an existing one, I already
knew how to build Web pages, and I had a student helper. If you're starting
from the ground up, it will take even longer. Most of the time and effort goes to
content and learning activities. There are many useful interactive devices that
you can put in your pages, using JAVA script code that others have written
(Ford, 1998; Flanagan, 1998; Goodman & Eich, 1998; Negrino & Smith,
1999).
If you are an experienced word-processor user, start learning a Web site
creation and management tool, such as NetObjects, Fusion, Dreamweaver, or
FrontPage, that is supported on your institution's Web server. Otherwise,
consider a CMS. Make arrangements with a Web host, either one at your
institution or one provided by a commercial Internet Service Provider host.
Typically, a webmaster will give you space on the server and create the login
access. The rest will be up to you.

My experiences with online courses have taught me the following:
1.
Have
a good reason to build an online course.
For my first online course, I did not identify a
market, nor did I have a good way to inform people about the course, so my
enrollment suffered.
2.
Convert
an existing course rather than create a new one.
Creating new subject matter while
building an online course can be overwhelming.
3.
Initiate
the effort well in advance of ÜdeliveryÝ date.
It took me a year to get my course
online, and I am still making improvements.
4. Change
your teaching style and philosophy. The unexpected advantage of the online environment is
that it weans me away from traditional lectures into the more satisfying world
of instructional management. Now my goal is not to transmit information from my
notes to student notes, but to help students find, digest, assimilate, and
apply knowledge.
5.
Use
content other than that at your Web site.
Too many online instructors think that all course
content has to be on their course's Web site. Not so. You do not have to
provide all the content (textbooks were not made obsolete by the Web). Internet
courses are readily enriched by linking to other Web sites and to electronic
libraries. Even with hard copy magazine and journal articles, the old-fashioned
Xerox approach is still useful. For example, I saved myself a lot of time and
effort by mailing paper copies of published readings (many journals have
liberal permission policies for educational uses).
6.
Focus
on content and learning activities, not technical frills.
The time I spent on graphics and
features such as grade books reduced the amount of time available for content
and learning activities.
7. Enforce
deadlines.
Students who procrastinate impair group work. To address this problem, I set
rigid deadlines for every major activity.
8. Put
the burden of communication on students.
I prefer team activities and assignments to open
discussion forums because team activities encourage more—and
better—participation. In those teams, the burden of communication is on the
students; I only monitor the process. I do not allow Ülurking,Ý where
students do no more than read the commentary of others. Part of the final grade
includes peer assessment of each student's contribution to the team effort.
9. Do
your own course maintenance. I like being in control of my own course and having the
technical skills to be largely independent of campus tech support. This also
encourages me to improve course content and keep it updated.
10.
Automate.
Automated electronic grade books
are helpful if you have a huge class. Another device I find useful is automated
feedback on assignments. My students reply via e-email to open-ended questions
on their reading assignments. When I receive their responses, I reply with a
ÜboilerplateÝ answer that includes key points students should provide
at exam times. The next time I teach the course, I will provide my opinions
about each reading (my students have requested this) in a similar boilerplate
posted in FORUM. My students will be invited to annotate my opinions. A third
automated device is Get
Smart, an electronic flashcard system I designed with my colleague Jim
Snell. We have also developed automated ways to deliver and score case studies
and to create a Ü20 questionsÝ game with academic material. Others
have produced crossword puzzle software that can be adapted for academic
material (see crosswordkit.com
or Crossword Express).
Pro-ductivity Systems (866-766-8876) offers an LCMS with a sophisticated assessment tool, ability to use Microsoft Producer and Powerpoint files, collaboration and several course authoring software tools.
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