Turning education upside-down

Online College Edu Blogger Scholarship ContestNote revised @ 12:30 p.m. CDT March 12, 2009.

This is my official entry into the 2009 Edu Blogger Scholarship Contest, and I want readers to know that if I am fortunate enough to win one of the three cash prizes, I will donate half of the winnings to the Missouri S&T Staff Council. This is my effort to help give a little bit back to an organization that means so much to our hard-working staff. But, I need your help. Part of the criteria for winning this award has to do with traffic back to the sponsoring site, so please click on the image above to help out. Thank you.

I took a fairly traditional route to a college degree — community college for two years, then on to the major state university — so I don’t have a lot of first-hand experience in the area of distance or online education. But in my work as a university communicator, I’ve written a lot about the distance and online programs we have at Missouri S&T. A few years ago, our staff published a magazine all about our online education program, and I had the good fortune to interview one of the pioneers of distance learning, Professor Ken Ragsdell, who teaches in our engineering management department. And through that interview, I learned a lot about the philosophy of education — not just online education, but all education.

Ken’s first shot at teaching students from a distance came in 1973, when the dean of engineering at Purdue, where Ken taught at the time, asked him to teach a course over live television. Thirty-six years later, he’s still teaching distance courses, both online and via satellite. What he’s learned over the years may look odd to many educators, but as he told me back in 2004, “Once you slip into this world of trying to look at education in a different way, innovation looks normal.”

And what is that different way?

The professor’s role switches now from expert/judge to coach. When I was younger, I saw myself as the major source of knowledge for my students. Now I have to be an educational manager and provide many paths to learning so students can easily navigate through a course — to put the students more in control of their educational experience and provide opportunities for all students to learn and realize their potential.

You’ve got to turn the educational process upside-down and put the student at the center. It’s a bit humbling, because as a professor you lose some control. But the reward for that is better student learning and much better retention.

What online learning also does, according to Ragsdell, is flip-flop higher learning’s traditional paradigm. Universities are organized around synchronicity. Classes and semesters begin and end at specific times. When time’s up, students are judged by what they’ve learned during that period.

What would happen, though, if universities ditched the obsession with sequential education in favor of a model more in step with online education?

  • What if students could complete a course at an accelerated pace, taking the final exam long before semester’s end?
  • What if students could elect to take only one or two hours of a three-hour course, what Ragsdell calls “micro-modules”?
  • Or what if students could enroll in two courses offered at the same time? If all the material is available online and professors are accessible, there’s no reason why the paradigm could not shift.

Those are some of the what if’s Ragsdell ponders. Turning education upside-down seems to make sense.

What do you think?

Oh, and don’t forget to click:

Online College Edu Blogger Scholarship Contest

Bloggers losing ground as authority figures?

That’s the question asked (and slightly reworded here) by Brian Solis in Techcrunch this morning (story here; hat tip to twitterer Andrew_Arnold there).

Solis argues that new micromedia platforms like Twitter, FriendFeed and Facebook are eroding the authority — and value? — of the traditional blog. (Seems odd to call blogging a “traditional” communication form, but traditions seem to come and go quickly in Internet time. Oh, well.)

Says Solis:

We are learning to publish and react to content in “Twitter time” and I’d argue that many of us are spending less time blogging, commenting directly on blogs, or writing blogs in response to blog sources because of our active participation in micro communities.

With the popularity and pervasiveness of microblogging (a.k.a. micromedia) and activity streams and timelines, Twitter, Facebook, FriendFeed and the like are competing for your attention and building a community around the statusphere – the state of publishing, reading, responding to, and sharing micro-sized updates.

Fair enough assessment. Now that many of my offline social networks (friends, family, work associates, high school and college classmates) have migrated to online sites like Facebook and Twitter, I find myself passing little electronic notes back and forth in the form of tweets and wall posts, rather than comments on blogs.

This new genre of rapid-fire interaction is further distributing the proverbial conversation and is evolving online interaction beyond the host site through syndication to other relevant networks and communities.

In most cases attention for commenters at the source post are competing against the commenters within other communities. Those who might typically respond with a formal blog post may now choose to respond with a tweet or a status update.

True again. But what about the source material so many Twitter users fall back on? They pull from blogs and retweet the links, in much the same way old-school bloggers would quote and link back to a news source. Just as I was about to lodge a protest along these lines against Solis’ argument, he turned the tables on me.

Authority within the blogosphere demands a new foundation to measure rank and relevancy that is reflective of the real world behavior and interaction of those who are compelled to link back to the post and extend its visibility in new, engaging, and prominent communities.

Ah, the old devil’s advocate post. It gets me every time. Solis is a blogger, so I should have known he didn’t really buy his own argument.

But what about measuring authority?

Solis goes on to philosophize about a new sort of Technorati-ish measurement for Twitter links, and so on. (Read the post if you’ve got 10 minutes to spare and are interested in that kind of thing.) But as this-here post shows — a blog post that links to a blog that was discovered via a tweet from someone I follow on Twitter — the social media sphere is far too interconnected. The various strands of the social media sphere are far too entangled to tease out and separate into disparate, measurable units. What’s really needed is an index that connects blog authority to Twitter authority to Facebook authority to FriendFeed authority to …

Or maybe Solis and I just need to get out more.

P.S. – Comments are fixed now, so feel free to leave me one.