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Friday, March 25, 2005 |
Course
Management System Utilization and Implications for Practice - Charles
F. Harrington, Scott A. Gordon, Timothy J. Schibik, OJDLA. Over time, higher education has seen a number of innovations, some
revolutionary, others having minimal to no impact (Katz, 2003). Over
the last decade, the development of computer software and hardware
directed toward education and the teaching and learning process has had
tremendous impact on course delivery (Glahn and Gen, 2002; Katz, 2003).
During this period, higher education has been witness to fundamental
changes from courses delivered in the traditional face-to-face method
to those delivered via video cassette and television, to a
proliferation of courses and course content delivered via computer
technologies. In recent years, the use of Internet resources (i.e. web
pages) in course and curriculum development has made a significant
impact on teaching and learning. The use of the Internet has evolved
from the display of static, dull, and lifeless information to a rich
multimedia environment that is both engaging, dynamic, and user
friendly (Powel and Gill, 2003)
[Online Learning Update]
10:31:55 AM Google It!.
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Paying for Better Teaching. Here's
a radical idea--pay big dollars to get better teaching! This article
from Inside Higher Ed (March 23, 2005) reports on grant activities at
the Hughes Institute: "The Howard Hughes Medical
Institute (with an endowment in excess of $12 billion) ... in 2002 it
decided to turn 20 professors at research universities into 'million
dollar professors,' giving them
each $1 million to push for real change in the way students are taught
at top universities. In terms of grants for curricular or teaching
change, where many professors are thrilled to get $50,000 from a
foundation or relief from teaching one course, $1 million is huge."
This initiative departs from the usual approach in higher education
(and US education K thru X), which is to pay less than auto assembly
line wages, and expect to get the workers/teachers to come up with new
car designs that their students can drive away in four years.
"Three years into the program, evidence is
emerging that the Hughes grants are indeed changing many courses. While
the efforts of the various professors differ, there is a strong
emphasis on making introductory courses more exciting, looking for ways
to enhance professor-student interaction even in large lecture courses,
and trying new approaches to testing what students learn."
These efforts to improve teaching could be multiplied many times if
the Hughes grants were also tied into an MIT-style opencourseware
commitment. ____JH [EduResources Weblog--Higher Education Resources Online]
10:08:53 AM Google It!.
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© Copyright 2005 Bruce Landon.
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