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Distance''], scholarly journal
Distance''], scholarly journal
* [http://www.washington.edu/doit/Resources/accessdl.html The Center on Accessible Distance Learning (AccessDL)], DO-IT Center, University of Washington
* [http://www.washington.edu/doit/Resources/accessdl.html The Center on Accessible Distance Learning (AccessDL)], DO-IT Center, University of Washington
* [http://www.edutech.net.in/EduTechViewArticle.htm?Issue=1301&Article=ART00003]An Abridged Chronology on 50 Years of Open and Distance Education in India
{{DEFAULTSORT:Distance Education}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Distance Education}}
[[Category:Distance education| ]]
[[Category:Distance education| ]]

Revision as of 18:56, 18 March 2013

Distance education or distance learning is a mode of delivering education and instruction, often on an individual basis, to students who are not physically present in a traditional setting such as a classroom. Distance learning provides "access to learning when the source of information and the learners are separated by time and distance, or both."[1] Distance education courses that require a physical on-site presence for any reason (including taking examinations) have been referred to as hybrid[2] or blended[3] courses of study.

History and development

Distance education dates back to at least as early as 1728, when "an advertisement in the Boston Gazette... [named] 'Caleb Phillips, Teacher of the new method of Short Hand" was seeking students for lessons to be sent weekly.[4]

Correspondence courses

Modern distance education initially relied on mail service and has been practised at least since Isaac Pitman taught shorthand in Great Britain via correspondence in the 1840s.[5] The University of London was the first university to offer distance learning degrees, establishing its External Programme in 1858. This program is now known as the University of London International Programmes and includes Postgraduate, Undergraduate and Diploma degrees created by colleges such as the London School of Economics, Royal Holloway and Goldsmiths.[6]

In the United States William Rainey Harper, first president of the University of Chicago developed the concept of extended education, whereby the research university had satellite colleges of education in the wider community, and in 1892 he also encouraged the concept of correspondence school courses to further promote education, an idea that was put into practice by Columbia University.[7][8]

Enrollment in the largest private for-profit school based in Scranton, Pennsylvania, the International Correspondence Schools grew explosively in the 1890s. Originally founded in 1888 to provide training for immigrant coal miners eager to qualify as state mine inspectors or foremen, it enrolled 2500 new students in 1894, leaping to 72,000 new students in 1895. By 1906 total enrollments reached 900,000. The growth was due to sending out complete textbooks instead of single lessons, and the use of 1200 aggressive in-person salesmen. By 1916 it was spending $2 million a year on magazine advertising.[9] The dropout rates were high; only one in six made it past the first third of the material in a course. Only 2.6% of students who began a course finished it. The students dropped out because they overestimated the difficulty, had little encouragement, and had poor study habits.[10] There was a stark contrast in pedagogy:

"The regular technical school or college aims to educate a man broadly; our aim, on the contrary, is to educate him only along some particular line. The college demands that a student shall have certain educational qualifications to enter it, and that all students study for approximately the same length of time, and when they have finished their courses they are supposed to be qualified to enter any one of a number of branches in some particular profession. We, on the contrary, are aiming to make our courses fit the particular needs of the student who takes them."[11]

Education was a high priority in the Progressive Era, as American high schools and colleges expanded greatly. For men too old or too tied down with family responsibilities, night schools were opened, such as the YMCA school in Boston that became Northeastern University. Outside the big cities, private correspondence schools offered a flexible, narrowly focused solution. In 1916 efficiency was enhanced by the formation of the National Association of Corporation Schools.[12]

Universities around the world used correspondence courses in the first half of the 20th century, especially to reach rural students. Australia with its vast distances was especially active; the University of Queensland established its Department of Correspondence Studies in 1911.[13] The International Conference for Correspondence Education held its first meeting in 1938.[14] The goal was to provide individualized education for students, at low cost, by using a pedagogy of testing, recording, classification, and differentiation.[15][16]

Radio and television

The very rapid spread of radio in the United States in the 1930s led to proposals to use it for distance education. By 1938, at least 200 city school systems, 25 state boards of education, and many colleges and universities broadcast educational programs for the public schools.[17] One line of thought was to use radio as a master teacher.

" Experts in given fields broadcast lessons for pupils within the many schoolrooms of the public school system, asking questions, suggesting readings, making assignments, and conducting test. This mechanize is education and leaves the local teacher only the tasks of preparing for the broadcast and keeping order in the classroom." [18]

A typical setup came in Kentucky in 1948 when John Wilkinson Taylor, president of the University of Louisville, teamed up with the National Broadcasting Corporation to use radio as a medium for distance education, The chairman of the Federal Communications Commission endorsed the project and predicted that the "college-by-radio" would put "American education 25 years ahead." The University was owned by the city, and local residents would pay the low tuition rates, receive their study materials in the mail, and listen by radio to live classroom discussions that were held on campus. [19]

Charles Wedemeyer of the University of Wisconsin–Madison also promoted new methods. From 1964 to 1968, the Carnegie Foundation funded Wedemeyer's Articulated Instructional Media Project (AIM) which brought in a variety of communications technologies aimed at providing learning to an off-campus population. According to Moore's recounting, AIM impressed the UK which imported these ideas when establishing in 1969 The Open University, which initially relied on radio and television broadcasts for much of its delivery.[20] Athabasca University, Canada's Open University, was created in 1970 and followed a similar, though independently developed, pattern.[21] The Open University inspired the creation of Spain's National University of Distance Education (1972)[22] and Germany's FernUniversität in Hagen (1974).[23] There are now many similar institutions around the world, often with the name "Open University" (in English or in the local language). All "open universities" use distance education technologies as delivery methodologies and some have grown to become 'mega-universities',[24] a term coined to denote institutions with more than 100,000 students. In 1976, Bernard Luskin launched Coastline Community College as a college beyond walls, combining computer assisted instruction with telecourses proceed by KOCE TV, the Coast Community College District public television station. Coastline has been a landmark strategic success in helping to establish online distance learning using modern technology for learning.

Internet

The widespread use of computers and the internet made distance learning distribution easier and faster and gave rise to virtual schools and virtual universities in which the entire educational offerings are conducted online.[25]

In 1996 Jones International University was launched and claims to be the first fully online university accredited by a regional accrediting association in the US.[26] Between 2000 and 2008, the undergraduate enrollment "in at least one distance education class expanded from 8 percent to 20 percent, and the percentage enrolled in a distance education degree program increased from 2 percent to 4 percent."[27]

Many private, public, non-profit and for-profit institutions worldwide now offer distance education courses from the most basic instruction through to the highest levels of degree and doctoral programs. Levels of accreditation vary: some of the institutions receive little outside oversight, and some may be fraudulent diploma mills, although in many jurisdictions, an institution may not use terms such as "university" without accreditation and authorisation, often overseen by the national government – for example, the Quality Assurance Agency in the UK.[28] In the US, the Distance Education and Training Council (DETC) specializes in the accreditation of distance education institutions.[29]

Technologies

Although the expansion of the Internet blurs the boundaries, distance education technologies are divided into two modes of delivery: synchronous learning and asynchronous learning.

In synchronous learning, all participants are "present" at the same time. In this regard, it resembles traditional classroom teaching methods despite the participants being located remotely. It requires a timetable to be organized. Web conferencing, videoconferencing, educational television, instructional television are examples of synchronous technology, as are direct-broadcast satellite (DBS), internet radio, live streaming, telephone, and web-based VoIP.[30]

In asynchronous learning, participants access course materials flexibly on their own schedules. Students are not required to be together at the same time. Mail correspondence, which is the oldest form of distance education, is an asynchronous delivery technology as are message board forums, e-mail, video and audio recordings, print materials, voicemail and fax.[30]

The two methods can be combined. Many courses offered by The Open University use periodic sessions of residential or day teaching to supplement the remote teaching.[31] The Open University uses a blend of technologies and a blend of learning modalities (face-to-face, distance and hybrid) all under the rubric of "distance learning."

Distance learning can also use interactive radio instruction (IRI), interactive audio instruction (IAI), online virtual worlds, digital games, webinars, and webcasts.[31]

Benefits

Distance learning can expand access to education and training for both general populace and businesses since its flexible scheduling structure lessens the effects of the many time-constraints imposed by personal responsibilities and commitments.[32] Devolving some activities off-site alleviates institutional capacity constraints arising from the traditional demand on institutional buildings and infrastructure.[32] As the population at large becomes more involved in lifelong learning beyond the normal schooling age, institutions can benefit financially, and adult learning business courses may be particularly lucrative.[32] Distance education programs can act as a catalyst for institutional innovation.[32]

Distance learning may enable students who are unable to attend a traditional school setting due to disabilities, handicaps, or sicknesses such as decreased mobility and immune system suppression to get a good education,[33] and may provide equal access regardless of socioeconomic status or income, area of residence, gender, race, age, or cost per student.[34] Applying universal design strategies to distance learning courses as they are being developed (rather than instituting accommodations for specific students on an as-needed basis) can increase the accessibility of such courses to students with a range of abilities, disabilities, learning styles, and native languages.[35] Distance education graduates, who would have never have been associated with the school under a traditional system, may donate money to the school.[36]

Criticism

Barriers to effective distance education include obstacles such as domestic distractions and unreliable technology[37] as well as students' program costs, adequate contact with teachers and support services, and a need for more experience.[38]

Some students attempt distance education without proper training of the tools needed to be successful in the program. Students must be provided with training on each tool that is used throughout the program. The lack of advanced technology skills can lead to an unsuccessful experience. Schools have a responsibility to adopt a proactive policy for managing technology barriers.[39]

Because online courses may have no upper size limit, there is a theoretical problem about the application of traditional teaching methods to online courses. Daniel Barwick noted that there is no evidence that large class size is always worse or that small class size is always better, although a negative link has been established between certain types of instruction in large classes and learning outcomes; he argued that higher education has not made a sufficient effort to experiment with a variety of instructional methods to determine whether large class size is always negatively correlated with a reduction in learning outcomes.[40] Early proponents of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOC)s saw them as just the type of experiment that Barwick had pointed out was lacking in higher education, although Barwick himself has never advocated for MOOCs.

See also

References

  1. ^ Honeyman, M (1993). "Agriculture distance education: A valid alternative for higher education?". Proceedings of the 20th Annual National Agricultural Education Research Meeting: 67–73. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Tabor, Sharon W (Spring 2007). "Narrowing the Distance: Implementing a Hybrid Learning Model". Quarterly Review of Distance Education. 8 (1). IAP: 48–49. ISSN 1528-3518. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  3. ^ Vaughan, Dr Norman D. (2010). "Blended Learning". In Cleveland-Innes, MF; Garrison, DR (eds.). An Introduction to Distance Education: Understanding Teaching and Learning in a New Era. Taylor & Francis. p. 165. ISBN 0‐415‐99598‐1. Retrieved 23 January 2011. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  4. ^ Holmberg, Börje (2005). The evolution, principles and practices of distance education. Studien und Berichte der Arbeitsstelle Fernstudienforschung der Carl von Ossietzky Universität Oldenburg [ASF] (in German). Vol. 11. Bibliotheks-und Informationssystem der Universitat Oldenburg. p. 13. ISBN 3‐8142‐0933‐8. Retrieved 23 January 2011. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  5. ^ Moore, Michael G. (2005). Distance Education: A Systems View (2nd ed.). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth. ISBN 0-534-50688-7. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  6. ^ "Key Facts", External Programme, University of London.
  7. ^ Levinson, David L (2005). Community colleges: a reference handbook. ABC-CLIO. p. 69. ISBN 1‐57607‐766‐7. Retrieved 23 January 2011. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  8. ^ Von V. Pittman, "Correspondence Study in the American University: A Second Historiographical Perspective, in Michael Grahame Moore, William G. Anderson, eds. Handbook of Distance Education pp 21-36
  9. ^ Joseph F. Kett, Pursuit of Knowledge Under Difficulties: From Self-Improvement to Adult Education in America (1996) pp 236-8
  10. ^ J.J. Clark, "The Correspondence School--Its Relation to Technical Education and Some of Its Results," Science (1906) 24#611 pp 327-8, 332, 333. Clark was manager of the school's text-book department.
  11. ^ Clark, "The Correspondence School" (1906) p 329
  12. ^ Kett, Pursuit of Knowledge Under Difficulties, p 240
  13. ^ White, M (1982). "Distance education in Australian higher education — a history". Distance Education. 3 (2): 255–278.
  14. ^ Francis Lee (2009). Letters and bytes: Sociotechnical studies of distance education. Francis Lee. p. 48.
  15. ^ Francis Lee, "Technopedagogies of mass-individualization: correspondence education in the mid twentieth century," History & Technology (2008) 24#3 pp 239-253
  16. ^ Ellen L. Bunker, "The History of Distance Education through the Eyes of the International Council for Distance Education," in Michael Grahame Moore, William G. Anderson, eds. Handbook of Distance Education pp 49-66
  17. ^ Levering Tyson, "Ten Years of Educational Broadcasting," School and Society (1936) 44:225-31
  18. ^ Lloyd Allen Cook, Community Backgrounds of Education: A Textbook and Educational Sociology (1938) pp 249-50
  19. ^ Dwayne D. Cox and William J. Morison, The University of Louisville (1999) pp 115-17
  20. ^ Moore, Michael G (2005). Distance Education: A Systems View (2nd ed.). Belmont, CA: Wadsworth. pp. 33–36. ISBN 0-534-50688-7. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help).
  21. ^ Byrne, T. C. (1989). Athabasca University The Evolution of Distance Education. Calgary, Alberta: University of Calgary Press. p. 135. ISBN 0-919813-51-8.
  22. ^ "History of UNED (in Spanish)". ES. Retrieved 26 January 2012.
  23. ^ "Three Decades". UK: FernUniversität in Hage. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  24. ^ Daniel, Sir John S (1998). Mega-Universities and Knowledge Media: Technology Strategies for Higher Education. Routledge. ISBN 0‐7494‐2634‐9. Retrieved 23 January 2011. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help)
  25. ^ Gold, Larry; Maitland, Christine (1999). Phipps, Ronald A.; Merisotis, Jamie P. (eds.). What's the difference? A review of contemporary research on the effectiveness of distance learning in higher education. Washington, DC: Institute for Higher Education Policy. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  26. ^ "Accreditation". US: Jones International University. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  27. ^ Walton Radford, MPR Associates, Alexandria. "Learning at a Distance: Undergraduate Enrollment in Distance Education Courses and Degree Programs" (PDF). National Center for Education Statistics. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
  28. ^ "Degree awarding powers and university title". UK: Quality Assurance Agency. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  29. ^ Accreditation, DETC.
  30. ^ a b Lever-Duffy, Judy; McDonald, Jean B (2007). Teaching and Learning with Technology. Ana A. Ciereszko, Al P. Mizell (3rd ed.). Allyn & Bacon. p. 377. ISBN 0‐205‐51191‐0. Retrieved 23 January 2011. {{cite book}}: Check |isbn= value: invalid character (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  31. ^ a b Burns, Mary. Distance Education for Teacher Training: Modes, Models and Methods. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
  32. ^ a b c d Oblinger, Diana G. (2000). "The Nature and Purpose of Distance Education". The Technology Source (March/April). Michigan: Michigan Virtual University. Retrieved 23 January 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |day= and |month= (help)
  33. ^ "An Exploration of the Representation of Students with Disabilities in Distance Education". Retrieved 7 December 2012.
  34. ^ "Cyber-charter Schools: The end of Public Education or a New Beginning".
  35. ^ Burgstahler, S.,"Equal Access: Universal Design of Distance Learning". Retrieved 12 February 2013.
  36. ^ Casey, Anne Marie; Lorenzen, Michael (2010). "Untapped Potential: Seeking Library Donors Among Alumni of Distance Learning Programs". Journal of Library Administration. 50 (5). Routledge: 515–529. doi:10.1080/01930826.2010.48859. Retrieved 23 January 2011. {{cite journal}}: Cite has empty unknown parameters: |day= and |month= (help)
  37. ^ Östlund, Berit. "Stress, disruption and community — Adult learners' experiences of obstacles and opportunities in distance education". Department of Child and Youth Education, Special Education and Counselling, Umeå University. Retrieved 3 December 2011.
  38. ^ Galusha, Jill M. "Barriers to Learning in Distance Education". Retrieved 10 April 2012.
  39. ^ Stephens, D. (July 2007). "Quality issues in distance learning" (PDF).
  40. ^ Barwick, Daniel W. "Views: Does Class Size Matter?". Inside Higher Ed. Retrieved 3 October 2011.

Further reading

  • Clark, J.J. "The Correspondence School--Its Relation to Technical Education and Some of Its Results," Science (1906) 24#611 pp. 327-334 in JSTOR
  • Hampel, Robert L. "The Business of Education: Home Study at Columbia University and the University of Wisconsin in the 1920s and 1930s," Teachers College Record (2010) 112#9 pp 2496-2571
  • Holmberg, Börje. Theory and Practice of Distance Education (2nd ed 1995) online
  • Kett, Joseph F. Pursuit of Knowledge Under Difficulties: From Self-Improvement to Adult Education in America (1996) excerpt and text search
  • Moore, Michael Grahame and William Anderson (2nd ed. 2012). Handbook of Distance Education. Psychology Press. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help) online edition
  • Moore, M.G., ed. Contemporary issues in American distance education (1990)
  • Stubblefield, Harold W. and Patrick Keane. Adult Education in the American Experience: From the Colonial Period to the Present (1994) excerpt and text search
  • Walsh, Taylor. Unlocking the Gates: How and Why Leading Universities Are Opening Up Access to Their Courses (Princeton University Press, 2011) online

Distance], scholarly journal